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A History of Nailbiters: Lightning Game Sevens

Lecavalier and St. Louis: these two jokers have played in every Game Seven in franchise history, and have not lost one. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)

So the Lightning and the Bruins will lock up for Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Final on Friday night in Boston. This will mark the fourth time in Lightning history that a playoff series is decided in a winner-take-all game.

You may be aware that the Lightning are a clean 3-0 in their previous game seven matches.

Did you also know that all three previous sevens were decided by a single goal?

And that in two of them, the Lightning were short-handed in the final seconds?

How much more exciting can a series get?

Below the jump, we'll do a quick recap of the Lightning's past visits to the hallowed "Loser Leaves Town" match.

Star-divide

The First Seven: May 22, 2004 vs. the Philidelphia Flyers (Eastern Conference Final)

The Lightning, on the strength of their star-studded forward depth and with All-World goalie Nikolai Khabibulin in the crease, absolutely smoked their first and second round opponents, needing only nine games combined to dispatch both the Canadiens and the Islanders. They got their first real test of the playoffs against the veteran Flyers squad, led by hulking center Keith Primeau.

The two teams alternated wins all through the series, with Tampa Bay taking games 1, 3, and 5, and the Flyers taking games 2 and 4 before gutting out a tough overtime win in game 6 to force the decider at the St. Pete Times Forum.

The Flyers carried the play through much of the first period but came away empty-handed, including going 0-2 on the power play. With 3:14 remaining in the first, the Lightning struck on the man advantage when Brad Richards' slapper bounced off Martin St. Louis, off Ruslan Fedotenko's stick, and past Flyers keeper Robert Esche. The goal was credited to Fedotenko, who was kind of like 2004's version of Sean Bergenheim (seventeen goals in the regular season, and then twelve in the playoffs).

Freddie Modin padded the lead for the Bolts in the second. That goal stood up as the winner after Kim Johnsson got the Flyers on the board later in the second. The game went down to the final seconds, but Khabibulin prevented the Flyers from evening the score, and the Lightning advanced to the Stanley Cup Final.

The Second Seven: June 7, 2004 vs. the Calgary Flames (Stanley Cup Final)

The Lightning squared off against the Flames, who made the Stanley Cup Final the way all Western Conference teams do: by beating the Sharks in the Western Conference Finals. The Flames seemed to have the upper hand in the Final series, going up three games to two before the Lightning won game six in Calgary to force the big finale on home ice.

The game was a defensive battle. The Flames, unable to force the play, managed only seven shots through the first two periods, while Fedotenko again played the hero, sinking goals off feeds from Brad Richards and Vincent Lecavalier.

The Flames came to life in the third, when they directed ten shots on Khabibulin. Craig Conroy broke the Bulin Wall's shutout bid midway through the final period, setting up a frantic finish as the Flames desperately tried to tie it up. The tension reached sphinctor-clenching levels when Lightning captain Dave Andreychuk took a tripping penalty in the final minutes, allowing the Flames to finish the game on the power play. But the Lightning held on, and hoisted the Cup for the first time in franchise history.

The Third Seven: April 27, 2011 vs. the Pittsburgh Penguins (Eastern Conference Quarter Final)

This one seemed like a game that never should have happened. The Penguins, despite missing star centers Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin to injury and forward/assassin Matt Cooke to suspension, had a 3-1 series lead through the first four games, forcing the Lightning to face elimination in three consecutive games. The Bolts steam-rolled the bewildered Pens 8-2 in game 5, and then won 4-2 at home to force a seventh game back in Pittsburgh.

Game Seven opened with the Pens outshooting the Bolts 15-7 in the first period, but Sean Bergenheim opened the scoring in the second on a no-look behind the net feed from Dominic Moore. The goal would be the only one Pens goalie Marc-Andre Fleury would allow, but it was enough, as Lightning goalie Dwayne Roloson, himself undefeated in his career in elimination games, would not allow a goal.

The game again featured a hair-puller ending, as Lightning forward Nate Thompson was sent off with 1:33 remaining on a slashing call. The Pens pulled Fleury for a six-on-four advantage, but their power play, which went a brutal 1-35 in the series, couldn't convert, and the Lightning advanced, sending the Penguins to ponder their inadequecies on the golf course.

 

(Nolan Whyte blogs about the Lightning at Raw Charge and at Frozen Sheets Hockey. Follow him @nolanwhyte. This article was written with notes from espn.go.com and lightning.nhl.com)

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2004 SCF game seven

talk about crap ice conditions. It was so humid int eh building there was thick condensation on the concourses and the steps. I slipped and slid EVERYWHERE.

What a THRILL though. Both teams were so wasted from the travel and the series, and the playoffs….

Typing is an adventure, and reading should be, too!
Raw Charge.

by John Fontana on May 26, 2011 11:36 PM EDT reply actions  

Hope to experience it myself personally. Definitely a bucket list item.

"[The Lightning] are uncanny. When they want to get a goal, it's like they just snap their fingers or hit a button. They just dial it up. You can see it. It's like they flip a switch. When they are down, it's just like they think, 'we know we are going to score.' I don't know what it is, it leaves [the opposition] flabbergasted." - Mike Knuble, 3 May 2011

by MTBoltFan on May 26, 2011 11:57 PM EDT up reply actions  

agreed

Heel for school, Vol for life!

Go Bolts! Out West, go Preds! Southern hockey solidarity!

by Incipient_Senescence on May 27, 2011 12:37 AM EDT up reply actions  

I've never hated a fanbase/team more

I vividly remember talking a lot of trash with Flyers fans during the 2004 ECF, and building up some genuine animosity, but it doesn’t even compare to this series. The entitlement/hubris of these Bs fans is astounding; it’s almost as if they truly believe a win is deserved because of Boston’s perceived greatness as a “sports town,” whatever the F that means.

Thankfully, nostalgic narratives don’t win championships – players and coaches do.

Go Lightning!

by vlac4 on May 27, 2011 12:40 AM EDT reply actions  

there have been some cool Bruins fans stopping by here

but there has been a lot more negatives than the other fans I’ve interacted with. Really don’t want to go down to these guys. Also, I’ll be in Boston next week, and it’d be nice to go after a win.

Heel for school, Vol for life!

Go Bolts! Out West, go Preds! Southern hockey solidarity!

by Incipient_Senescence on May 27, 2011 12:46 AM EDT up reply actions  

Must say, I’ve enjoyed the time here, haven’t seen much more negative/positive than any other series, and it’s been tame compared to Montreal and Philadelphia.

To be honest, I think it’s just because it’s fresh and everyone’s minds and it’s the ECF.

Regardless, looking forward to Game 7 tonight. Let the birds fly where they may.

by 13_Legion on May 27, 2011 9:36 AM EDT up reply actions  

I think the lack of existing animosity makes this series a little harsher.

Both Philly and Montreal are old enemies for Boston so much of the vitriol has been spewed already and either rolls off backs easier or counters have already been devised. Almost like a faceoff between two cagey vets who don’t want to start anything with their old enemy so they let some things rest. New rivals have no such reservations.

If that makes any sense…

by BobbyOrrsBastard on May 27, 2011 10:14 AM EDT up reply actions  

Defnitely the worst hockey fanbase I've ever interacted with

Travels at 140,000 mph. Produces 500 megajoules of energy. Originates from the heavens.

by Sveet on May 27, 2011 11:18 AM EDT up reply actions  

Love you too, mate. :)

by 13_Legion on May 27, 2011 12:17 PM EDT up reply actions   1 recs

+1

Typing is an adventure, and reading should be, too!
Raw Charge.

by John Fontana on May 27, 2011 6:10 PM EDT up reply actions  

Of course there are always exceptions. That Cornelius guy is actually pretty entertaining.

by vlac4 on May 27, 2011 12:53 AM EDT reply actions  

Great post, Nolan

I think somebody should design a “sphincter-clenching” scale to rate these kinds of events. Not me, though.

by Clark J Brooks on May 27, 2011 4:27 AM EDT reply actions  

In the 2004 Playoffs

I got sick of hearing that the Lightning “couldn’t win” because of “no history”.

We have some history now. A lot of teams would like to have a little of it.

Go Bolts!!!

by tampa_edski on May 27, 2011 11:01 AM EDT reply actions  

“no history”

Hello, Damien Cox, who believed the Flyers or the Maple Leafs would have a ECF bye for that specific reason.

History does not have to lace them up every night. As the marketing phrase goes, History will be made.

Typing is an adventure, and reading should be, too!
Raw Charge.

by John Fontana on May 27, 2011 11:28 AM EDT up reply actions  

This.

+1000000

Not that I’m in a hyperbolic mood or anything.

"[The Lightning] are uncanny. When they want to get a goal, it's like they just snap their fingers or hit a button. They just dial it up. You can see it. It's like they flip a switch. When they are down, it's just like they think, 'we know we are going to score.' I don't know what it is, it leaves [the opposition] flabbergasted." - Mike Knuble, 3 May 2011

by MTBoltFan on May 27, 2011 5:29 PM EDT via mobile up reply actions  

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