Stars hammer Lightning to open Stanley Cup Final

AP photo by Jason Franson / The Dallas Stars celebrate their victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday night in Edmonton. The Stars won 4-1 to open the best-of-seven series, which continues Monday night.
AP photo by Jason Franson / The Dallas Stars celebrate their victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday night in Edmonton. The Stars won 4-1 to open the best-of-seven series, which continues Monday night.

EDMONTON, Alberta - The Dallas Stars on the bench yelled for their teammates on the ice to hit the Tampa Bay Lightning. They did, over and over, the body checks and the shouts easily heard throughout an arena left empty because of the coronavirus pandemic for this most unusual Stanley Cup Final.

The well-rested Stars came out and hammered the banged-up Lightning, taking it to them for two periods and relying on goaltender Anton Khudobin to close the door in the third period to win 4-1 Saturday night for a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven series.

By the time the talented Lightning got rolling, it was too late.

"I don't even know if you need to take a shower after the first two periods," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. "They came out, they were skating, and I think we probably dipped our toes in the water a little bit and watched them skate around for a bit."

The NHL's title series opener started looking every bit like Dallas had four days off since winning the Western Conference and Tampa Bay just one after clinching the Eastern Conference. The Stars, who grinded their way through the playoffs with tight-checking toughness, came out hitting, knowing the Lightning are not fully healthy.

"They were right on top of us," said Yanni Gourde, who scored Tampa Bay's only goal. "They were on top of us right from the get go, so we've got to adjust and do a better job."

Blake Comeau hit 6-foot-6 Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman on one of the first shifts, and Joel Kiviranta crushed top center Brayden Point into the boards to set up Joel Hanley's first NHL goal of any kind. Defenseman Esa Lindell also got into the action early with Point, cross-checking him and leveling him in open ice.

"That's just the makeup and identity of our team," Comeau said. "I think we're playing our best hockey when we're engaged emotionally, physically, and getting in on the forecheck, pressuring their D, and everyone on our team has done a good job. When there's a chance to finish the hit, you finish the hit."

Four of the Stars' 25 first-period hits were on Point, who missed two games in the Eastern Conference finals and is visibly playing through pain. No. 2 center Anthony Cirelli injured his right leg in the sixth game of that series 48 hours before this one started.

Hanley and Jamie Oleksiak continued the Stars' postseason trend of getting goals from defensemen, and Kiviranta scored late in the second period to provide some breathing room. Jason Dickinson sealed it with an empty-netter with 1:18 left.

photo AP photo by Jason Franson / Dallas Stars goaltender Anton Khudobin makes a save against Tampa Bay Lightning center Alex Killorn (17) with Stars defenseman Joel Hanley at right during the third period of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday night in Edmonton.

Khudobin continued to shine in his first playoffs as the starter, making 35 often spectacular saves, and he was at his best making 22 stops in the third, when the Lightning found their legs and outshot the Stars 22-2. He came up big on two penalty kills and strengthened his case for the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.

"It's a team sport: I tried to my part, they tried to do that part and we all communicate there," Khudobin said. "It's always great when you see the guys blocking shots and things like that and cleaning front of the net, too."

There was no rest for the weary Lightning, who were a step slow early after failing to close out the New York Islanders in five games and needing overtime to move on. The title series still would have started two days later as the league tries to speed through the bubble playoffs and award the Stanley Cup, but they would have accumulated 73 fewer minutes of wear and tear.

Taking advantage of that was a point of emphasis for the Stars, who took one big first step to try to wear down the Lightning much like the St. Louis Blues did to the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup Final last year. Coach Rick Bowness said the Stars "know how we have to play" to be successful, and that style seemed to catch Tampa Bay off guard.

"We played an Islanders team that kind of sat back and relied on their structure a little bit, and Dallas seems to play a little bit more in our faces, and we have to realize that," Lightning defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk said.

Much is different 15 months since the Blues won it all for the first time in franchise history. Dallas is trying for its first title since 1999 and Tampa Bay since 2004, though this Lightning core reached the final in 2015.

The series got underway with the Stanley Cup stationed rinkside. For all the usual tradition of the trophy only getting to the arena when a team has the chance to win it, playing without fans present allowed the league to put it front and center for the players to literally see what they're playing for.

The Cup was put away after the first period. It could be seen next when the series is over.

"Didn't see it, doesn't matter," Bowness said. "All that matters is the next game. You can't afford to think about those things. all you can afford to think about is what's coming next."

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