Tuesday, October 12, 2021

The Best of Marvin Gaye

 

Marvin Gaye is one of the most talented artists that died way too soon. Even though we were only graced by his musical presence for a little over two decades, his library of great songs is very large.


Marvin Gaye

Top 20


1. What's Goin' On - One of the best-written songs of all time. "War is not the answer, for only Love can conquer Hate."

2. Mercy, Mercy Me (the Ecology) - Another masterpiece. Check out the cover by Corinne Bailey Rae and John Legend at Live Earth

3. I Heard it through the Grapevine - The first No. 1 hit for Marvin after Gladys Knight took it to No. 2

4. Ain't No Mountain High Enough - Beautiful tune written by the late Nickolas Ashford and the beautiful Valerie Simpson

5. Let's Get it On - Marvin's second No. 1 hit was about sexual liberation in 1973

6. Sexual Healing - The passionate song was Marvin's first single after he left Motown

7. I Want You - Song has a little disco edge to it in 1976

8. Gotta Give it Up - Marvin wrote this song in 1977 and you can dance to it

9. How Sweet It Is - The Motown-writing team put this to paper and Marvin took it to No. 6. James Taylor later made it his own and went to No. 5

10. Ain't That Peculiar - Smokey Robinson co-wrote and produced this wonderful bouncy number


11. After the Dance

12. Come Get to This

13. Inner City Blues

14. Can I Get a Witness

15. Pride and Joy

16. What's Happening Brother

17. Ain't Nothin' Like the Real Thing

18. That's the Way Love is

19. You're All I Need to Get By

20. Take This Heart of Mine


Others considered

When did you stop loving me, When did I stop loving you

Distant Lover

If I could build my whole world around you

Too Busy Thinking About my Baby

Trouble Man

Sad Tomorrows

Wholy Holy

You're the One for Me

Since I Had You

My Mistake (was to love you)

Heavy Love Affair

If I Should Die Tonight


Monday, October 11, 2021

How About A Three-Peat in Champa Bay?

 

By Mark Pukalo


Several issues can severely affect teams that win championships. They could get even worse when an organization celebrates two straight titles.

Salary caps may force management to break up the core, complacency can set in, they could get old all at once and the fatigue of two long postseasons can wear the players out.

The two-time Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay Lightning don’t appear to have any of those problems as the first full NHL season since 2018-19 begins on Tuesday night against the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins.

Sure, they lost their entire third line from the last two seasons and must retool the bottom six a bit, but the Bolts have not lost any of their All Stars to free agency. There certainly isn’t a motivation issue with this group, which would love to notch a place in history with three straight Cups. The Lightning are still a young team overall, with veteran newcomers Pierre-Eduoard Bellemare and Corey Perry the only regular skaters older than 33. This team never seems to wear out physically, either. They have made a habit of rebounding from losses the last two playoff runs.

Mental fatigue? We’ll see, but not sure that will keep the Lightning from making another run either.

There is no reason the Bolts can’t win a third straight Cup, unless injuries to their top players slow them down. It certainly won’t be easy, with several teams knocking at the door. 

“We just can't rest on what has happened the past two years,” captain Steven Stamkos told NHL.com. “The start is critical to any season and I think maybe even a little more so for our group now. Let's get off to a really good start. Especially when you have a team that has been together for as long as we have, that's when you take advantage is at the beginning of the year when some teams are just feeling out their rosters, guys are getting a chance, everyone is not dialed in on their special teams.”

The trio of Ondrej Palat, Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov has arguably become the best line in the league. That group is a given to put up big points. Like always, the Lightning will need complimentary scoring - primarily at even strength - from the other three lines.

How coach Jon Cooper will set up the bottom three forward trios is still unknown, but it would be a big plus if Stamkos can have an injury-free season, Alex Killorn can continue his increased production from the last two campaigns and Anthony Cirelli can have a breakout offensive season. Mathieu Joseph and Ross Colton must take that next step while Boris Katchouk and Taylor Raddysh assimilate smoothly into the NHL. (I just love Katchouk's potential) Early returns on Perry’s production potential look good after a dazzling preseason and the edgy winger will be more motivated than anyone to win his second Cup (He won with Anaheim in 2007) after losing to the Bolts the last two years.

The defense is set, led by Victor Hedman, Ryan McDonagh, Mikhail Sergachev and Erik Cernak. It would be a plus if first-round pick Cal Foote stepped up and put pressure or gave strong support to Jan Rutta and Zach Bogosian on the right side of the defense.

The loss of talented forward Alex Barre-Boulet on waivers to Seattle on Monday hurts the depth, but the Lightning think highly of centers Gage Goncalves and Simon Ryfors while others such as Gabriel Fortier and Otto Somppi showed in the preseason they could also help up front.

As Stamkos has said, the Lightning will always have a chance with the world’s best goalie in net in Andrei Vasilevskiy. How he did not win three straight Vezinas escapes me. But, the Big Cat has two Cups. I think he’ll take those instead. Veteran Brian Elliott (256 career wins) gets a chance as the backup.

Tampa Bay is the best team in the Eastern Conference, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they will make another final. The New York Islanders and Florida Panthers look good on paper and gave the Lightning their toughest tests in the 2021 playoffs. The Boston Bruins and Washington Capitals are never easy to knock out and the Pittsburgh Penguins might be a threat again if they can survive without Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin in the early months. The Philadelphia Flyers have upgraded their defense immensely and Carter Hart can't be that bad again, can he? The Carolina Hurricanes? There’s certainly a lot of talent there. The New York Rangers also have potential to make several steps forward.

But they will all have to catch the Lightning.

In my opinion, the only team that can beat Tampa Bay in the East right now is the Islanders. Lou Lamoriello did a masterful job in the offseason and if they can add another offensive player (Vladimir Tarasenko?) at the deadline or talented Oliver Wahlstrom emerges as a top-six scoring forward and/or Zach Parise finds the Fountain of Youth, this may be the team that ends the Bolts’ run.

Picks in the East:

Atlantic - 1. Tampa Bay; 2. Florida; 3. Boston; 4. Toronto; 5. Montreal; 6. Ottawa; 7. Detroit; 8. Buffalo

Metropolitan - 1. NY Islanders; 2. Philadelphia; 3. Carolina; 4. Washington; 5. NY Rangers; 6. Pittsburgh; 7. Columbus; 8. New Jersey

Wild Cards - Washington, NY Rangers

There’s no doubt the Colorado Avalanche and Vegas Golden Knights are the teams to beat in the West. But who will be the squads that give them the most trouble? That’s impossible to predict because all the contenders look similar. But here are my guesses at the division finishes.

Picks in the West

Central: 1. Colorado; 2. Minnesota; 3. Chicago; 4. Winnipeg; 5. St. Louis; 6. Dallas; 7. Nashville; 8. Arizona (Razor thin between 2nd and 7th)

Pacific: 1. Vegas; 2. Edmonton; 3. Los Angeles; 4. Vancouver; 5. Calgary; 6. San Jose; 7. Anaheim; 8. Seattle

Wild Cards - Winnipeg, Vancouver





Monday, September 27, 2021

Lightning look to Rebuild Bottom 6 in Preseason

 

By Mark Pukalo

There are several challenges to start, and likely more obstacles on the horizon for the Tampa Bay Lightning as they set sail on another season.

But there is a comforting, confident feeling in camp as they dive deeper into the exhibition season with three games the next three nights.

The pain of losing four key players to free agency and expansion while having only pennies of cap space left to spend is easily cured by the exhilaration and satisfaction of two straight Stanley Cup runs

The fatigue of two long postseasons is easily mitigated by the belief that the Bolts still have their top six forwards, top-four defensemen and the best goalie in the world all healthy for a chance at a three-peat.

With some smart moves by GM Julien Brisebois in the offseason and a handful of prospects ready for an opportunity with the big club, the Lightning should still be the favorite when the 2021-22 campaign gets underway Oct. 12.

The exhibition games will give the first indication what coach Jon Cooper has in mind when he rebuilds the bottom two forward lines that were so important in both Cup runs.

Barclay Goodrow (New York Rangers) and Blake Coleman (Calgary) left for well-deserved paydays as free agents and the irrepressible Yanni Gourde was the forward the Bolts lost to expansion Seattle. That threesome was so good in the last two postseasons that you can’t begin to replace their production. Cooper just has to find the right mix of players to continue rolling four lines. Tyler Johnson, who had a good postseason, was also dealt to create another hole.

Ross Colton emerged as more than a dependable forward last season, Mathieu Joseph has shown he is a capable NHL player and the Big Rig Pat Maroon is back to take three of the spots. Veterans Corey Perry and Pierre-Edouard Bellemare were added by Brisebois at bargain basement salaries, which likely leaves two roster positions - assuming no injuries.

That sets the stage for the biggest battle during the exhibition season. Sure, veterans Gemel Smith and Charles Hudon along with newcomer Simon Ryfors cannot be left out of the competition all together, but the final two spots should come down to rookies Boris Katchouk, Alex Barre-Boulet and Taylor Raddysh. If my math is correct, I believe the Lightning can only keep two due to cap concerns unless they roll the dice with just six defensemen on the roster.

Katchouk has been a good two-way player who improved offensively last season and Raddysh has been a scorer who is getting better at the 200-foot game. Barre-Boulet did not embarrass himself in a 15-game audition in Tampa Bay due to injuries last season, but it’s still unsure whether his AHL production will translate at the NHL level. The 24-year-old will have to show he can play on all four lines as well. Otto Somppi is also a name to remember down the road.

So, what will it be? Keep the top six together and use Colton between Joseph and Perry while Maroon and Bellemare play with Katchouk - the best Lightning forward in the exhibition opener Tuesday at Carolina (3-1 loss) - on the fourth line? Play Perry on the fourth line with the other two veterans and slide Raddysh or Barre-Boulet with Colton and Joseph? Use Joseph or Barre-Boulet with Alex Killorn and Anthony Cirelli while captain Steven Stamkos creates a top-9 scenario playing with Colton and Perry? Move Killorn to a third line with Colton and Perry?

There are so many ways Cooper can go and the hope is that the preseason makes it clear what the best route is.

Perhaps even more important is who takes the place of expert penalty killers Goodrow, Coleman and Gourde? Bellemare has plenty of experience to take one spot with Killorn and Cirelli remaining as the top pair. Colton, Joseph, Ondrej Palat, Perry and perhaps Katchouk will probably get their shot. Penalty killing might have been the least recognized important ingredient to the Lightning’s two Cup runs.

It will all be fun to watch.

The defense is set with Victor Hedman, Jan Rutta, Mikhail Sergachev, Erik Cernak and Ryan McDonagh joined by veteran free agent Zach Bogosian in the top six. Cal Foote will likely miss the first few weeks, so the Bolts could use Fredrik Claesson as seventh D man for a while. Darren Raddysh, Daniel Walcott (also a forward), Sean Day and even Andrej Sustr would likely be next in line.

This will all make the preseason interesting. 

The only thing I see holding the Lightning back in 2021-22 is the potential of injuries. I’m not sure the playoff run fatigue will affect this group.

The biggest challenge will likely be in their division. Toronto and Boston will still be tough, we learned how pesky Florida can be last season with a former Whaler as a coach, and heck, Montreal made the finals, didn’t they? Detroit and Ottawa are getting better and Buffalo probably can’t be worse than they have been.

But that obstacle is down the road. Now it’s time for Cooper to carve out the roster - and perhaps cross some fingers if a good prospect has to be sent through waivers. 

October is almost here.






Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Top 20 songs from The Clash

 

I really only knew seven songs by The Clash before beginning this project, but enjoyed doing a deep dive into their catalog of punk rock tunes. I gained a little more respect for the English group, especially their song writing.


Top 20

The Clash


1. Train in Vain - I ranked it the 106th best song of all time a few years ago

2. Rock the Casbah - The group's lone top 10 single in the U.S.

3. Should I Stay or Should I go? - Probably the band's best sing-a-long tune

4. London Calling - Named after the BBC's World Service station identification and covered by The Boss

5. Janie Jones - The opening track on the group's first album in 1977

6. Stay Free - My favorite among the songs I had not heard before

7. White Riot - The band's first single from its debut album

8. Complete Control - A grievance song against CBS Records

9. I Fought the Law - Cover of a song written by Sonny Curtis of the Crickets, who released it in 1960

10. Death or Glory - Included on the 1979 "London Calling" album and written about the previous generation of rock stars


11. Police on my back

12. Straight to Hell

13. Clampdown

14. The Call Up

15. The Magnificent Seven

16. Lost in the Supermarket

17. I'm Not Down

18. (White Man) In Hammersmith Palais

19. Brand New Cadillac

20. Bankrobber


Others

Safe European Home

Spanish Bombs

Somebody Got Murdered

Career Opportunities

Charlie don't surf

1977





Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Top 20 Songs With a Name in Them

 


Mark Pukalo

This one might have been more difficult than the Bruce Springsteen list. There were so many songs worthy of the top 20, but I ended up going with personal favorites, songs that brought back memories or meant something to me.


1. Alison - Elvis Costello - Alisons with one "L" are always trouble. The one Elvis sings about in this song took off her party dress for his little friend. Not good.

2. Brian Wilson - Barenaked Ladies - When I first heard the song I thought the lyric line was "lying in bed, just like Brian Wilson DEAD." It was "Did" of course. Fun song, check out their amazing version at Live Earth on Youtube.

3. Layla - Derek and the Dominos - Eric Clapton has been canceled in my life for his stupidity and racism, but this song has not.

4. Amie - Pure Prairie League - Great sing-a-long tune. Zac Brown and the Counting Crows have also done awesome covers

5. Angie - The Rolling Stones - Whether the song was about David Bowie's first wife or Keith Richards' daughter, it is a classic.

6. Rhiannon - Fleetwood Mac - Stevie Nicks wrote the tune and Lindsey Buckingham's guitar licks are amazing.

7. I'm Mandy, Fly Me - 10 CC - The under-rated classic song is about a man falling asleep in front of one of those old Eastern Airlines posters and dreaming of a mythical stewardess named Mandy, who saves him from sharks after a crash.

8. Rosalita - Bruce Springsteen - One of the Boss' great story songs about his girlfriend's disapproving parents. "Tell him this his last chance, to get your daughter in a fine romance. Because the record company, Rosie, just gave me a big advance."

9. Sara Smile - Hall and Oates - A classic soul song that reminds me of a certain junior high crush. That girl had an "H" in her name, though

10. Brandy - The Looking Glass - She was a fine girl. What a good wife she would have been. But her boyfriend's life, love and lady was the sea. 


11. Ariel - Dean Friedman - Ariel "wore a peasant blouse with nothin' underneath. I said "Hi." She said, "Yeah, I guess I am." Has there ever been a better lyric?

12. 867-5309 Jenny - Tommy Tutone - For a good time, call. Joe Maddon started a Tommy Tutone lineup one day. The Rays got trounced.

13. Peggy Sue - Buddy Holly - Written by Crickets band members Jerry Allison and Norman Petty, the tune made it to No. 3 on the Billboard chart.

14. Lola - The Kinks - Lots of different stories about what the song is about.

15. Come on Eileen - Dexy's Midnight Runners - Not one day goes by without regretting making more of an effort to get to know Eileen O'Brien in the summer of 1982. This song reminds me of her (she wasn't dirty, though, lol), but also perhaps the biggest mistake of my life. Baring my soul. But that's what great music brings out

16. Roxanne - The Police - She didn't have to put on the red light.

17. Venus - The Shocking Blue - She had it. Yeah baby, she had it!

18. Maggie May - Rod Stewart - The song was originally released as a B side to "Reason to Believe," but became and No. 1 hit.

19. Beth - Kiss - Poor Beth. The boys were playing all night and she was left alone.

20. Rikki Don't Lose that Number - Steely Dan - You don't want to call nobody else.


Next 20

Mandy - Barry Manilow

Hey Jude - The Beatles

Eleanor Rigby - The Beatles

Voices Carry - 'Til Tuesday

Veronica - Elvis Costello

A Boy Named Sue - Johnny Cash

Bennie and the Jets - Elton John

Little Jeannie - Elton John

Dreamboat Annie - Heart

Amanda - Boston

Jessie's Girl - Rick Springfield

Luka - Suzanne Vega

Jamie's Cryin' - Van Halen

I Love you Suzanne - Lou Reed

Jolene - Dolly Parton

Jack and Diane - John Cougar

Goodbye Earl - Dixie Chicks

Tim McGraw - Taylor Swift

Angela - Missy Higgins

Alicia Ross - Kathleen Edwards







Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Top Summertime Songs

 

Summertime Songs

Top 20


1. In the Summertime - Mungo Jerry: I think of the scene in Wedding Crashers when I hear the song nowadays

2. Ridin' in My Car - NRBQ: Just a great song that I probably should have made No. 1

3. Saturday in the Park - Chicago: Makes you think of picnicking in the summer sun

4. Boys of Summer - Don Henley: The song about "summer love" made it to No. 5 on the Billboard chart

5. Good Vibrations - The Beach Boys: Don't you have to have a Beach Boys song in the top 5?

6. Under the Boardwalk - The Drifters: Top five chart song evokes romance in a seaside town

7. Indian Summer - Poco: Beautiful song from the California band with a tremendous guitar solo

8. Walking on Sunshine - Katrina & the Waves: It also works perfectly on Monday morning, too, doesn't it? 

9. Summer Breeze - Seals & Crofts:  Smooth song from the early 1970s that reached No. 6 on the charts

10. Twisting by the Pool - Dire Straits: Should be a law that it is played at all pool parties in the summer


11. Wipe Out - The Surfaris

12. Here Comes the Sun - The Beatles

13. Hot Fun in the Summertime - Sly & the Family Stone

14. Vacation - The Go Gos

15. Margaritaville - Jimmy Buffet

16. Summertime - DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince

17. Suddenly, Last Summer - The Motels

18. Summer in the City - Lovin' Spoonful

19. Summerlong - Kathleen Edwards

20. School's Out - Alice Cooper


Joe Lunardi's first eight out

Summer of '69 - Bryan Adams

Dock of the Bay - Otis Redding

Surf City - Jan & Dean

Surfer Girl - The Beach Boys

4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy) - Bruce Springsteen

Lovely Day - Bill Withers

Rock Lobster - B-52s

Sunshine - World Party






Sunday, July 11, 2021

It Takes a Village to win Two Cups



By Mark Pukalo


One by one, they handed the Stanley Cup to the next in a preordained order. The captain, the first-round picks, the smart acquisitions, the undrafted, all raised the beautiful trophy to the delight of a raucous Amalie Arena crowd.

Each player had his own story, an integral role in this royal achievement and his own reason to be proud.  

Then, it was time for coach Jon Cooper, his staff and everyone else involved in the locker room. Owner Jeff Vinik took the chalice and let his emotions flow.

When you win two straight championships in this day and age of professional sports, it takes everyone pulling on the same rope, everyone fighting together and each person - as Bill Belichick oftens says, “doing their job.”

The Tampa Bay Lightning have done just that since the demoralizing disappointment of a four-game sweep against Columbus in the first round of the 2019 playoffs. Sure, there was some luck involved with the makeup of this year’s team. You always have to earn some. But, in the end, they were just a little better than everyone else - from scouting, to the development staff, to the general manager’s office, to the owner’s willingness to spend and grow, to the class and leadership in the locker room and the talent that translated onto the ice.

The best organization in sports resides at Amalie Arena. Who’s better? The only one that you might argue is close is the Los Angeles Dodgers. But they signed Trevor Bauer. The Lightning would never sign anyone like him.

This postseason, the Bolts faced diverse challenges. They emerged from a knockout, drag out Sunshine State fight with the Florida Panthers and coach Joel Quenneville in six games. They took out the speedy Carolina Hurricanes in five, much easier than expected. They found a way to edge the gritty New York Islanders in a nervous Game 7. Then, the Lightning pushed aside the upstart Les Habitants from Montreal in five to win the third Cup in franchise history.

All through this run, my main thought was - “enjoy this, Lightning fans. Whatever happens. You may never see a better team to root for in your sporting life. You got one Cup. The rest is icing.” But it really wasn’t. Once you make it to the semifinals, it’s so close you have to do it again. You have to make it special, get two of them, and write history.

They made it frustrating at times with Blake Coleman’s turnover in overtime of Game 6 against the Isles and the failed four-minute power play in Game 4 at Montreal. But this team has learned how to close. This group knows what it takes. It starts in goal with the best in the world in Andrei Vasilevskiy, but it is truly a group effort that has allowed them to shut out opponents to clinch the last five playoff series. That is the one statistic that best shows what the team is made of.

"I can't tell you how much I enjoyed watching them play through this playoff run," Tampa Bay GM Julien Brisebois told reporters this week. "Not only as the general manager of this organization, but as a hockey fan. Obviously, such a talented group. But most importantly, so much collective heart. All the blocked shots, all the hits given and taken, all the punches given and taken, all the competing through injury. It was outstanding and so inspiring to watch."

So, now the Lightning will have many haters. No one likes the two-time winner outside of its fan community. They will talk about cap circumvention, luck, short seasons and “cheating.” Honestly, it’s just jealousy and laziness. Who cares?

The Lightning is just better. Maybe only a little, especially against the Islanders. But Brisebois was faced with a seemingly impossible situation in the offseason. The injury and surgery for Nikita Kucherov helped, but he also had to give up a lot of future draft picks to assure the Bolts would be under the cap and could acquire a needed right-handed veteran defenseman in David Savard at the trade deadline.

Tampa Bay has given up a first, a second and fourth-round selections in the draft later this month along with second and third rounders in 2020. But how much do you want to bet that scouting director and assistant GM Al Murray gets a gem among his three picks in the seventh round this year?

Anthony Cirelli, Alex Killorn (former scouting department, but developed under Cooper) and Brayden Point - third-round picks.

Ross Colton, Mathieu Joseph and Ben Thomas - fourth.

Ondrej Palat - seventh.

Tyler Johnson and Yanni Gourde - undrafted.

Heck, Kucherov was the 58th pick in 2011 and Vasilevskiy went 19th in 2012. You could make an easy case that each is the best player in their class.

It takes everyone. The coach, who I was so critical of during the many years of great regular seasons and playoff failures, has learned from mistakes and become a positive force. You never agree with everything, like his benching of Cal Foote this season, but all his moves worked out the past two years.

The shutouts in deciding games were great in their two runs, but just as impressive is the way the Lightning reacted to playoff losses. They won every one of them. When they seemed drained mentally, they always had an answer. That’s on the coach, the leadership, the culture.

Captain Steven Stamkos was only able to lead through all but three minutes of playing time in last season’s run due to injury. He scored eight goals, playing likely on one healthy leg, to help the Bolts this time around. He is a true leader, but he has a great supporting cast in that department. Victor Hedman was also injured the past few months and still had 18 points in 23 playoff games, Ryan McDonagh was the team’s best defenseman in the postseason and Alex Killorn had eight goals and 17 points in 19 contests before breaking his leg blocking a shot in Game 1 of the finals.

Killorn was drafted in 2007, one year before Stamkos and two ahead of Hedman. He has been in the organization longer than anyone and, in my opinion, has often been the glue along with Palat that has kept the middle core together supporting the stars.

After the 2007 draft, I decided to go see Killorn play for Deerfield Academy a few times when he was in Connecticut during his last high school season. I saw a few people standing at the glass behind Deerfield’s goal, cheering for the team one day at Avon Old Farms. I decided to ask them about Killorn.

It went something like this:

“Hi, how are you? I’m a Lightning fan up here, believe or not. Do you know Alex well, what kind of a kid is he?

Cindy or Matt replied: “Well, we hope he’s a good kid. He’s our son.”

They asked about the competition in the ECAC, as Alex was headed to Harvard. We had a nice short chat.

I saw Killorn later that season at Loomis Chaffee and remarked at how smooth and composed he was with the puck. He still is, but in his many years of development Alex has become a real power forward in the NHL - and the kind of player who does all the little things. I remember a few nights looking at the box score this season and being surprised to see he played more minutes than any other forward.

I relayed the story of meeting his parents to Killorn at one of the prospect camps. He laughed. It wasn't hard to see Alex was the type of player you win championships with (one in the AHL, two in the NHL). 

Championship teams need stars like Hedman, the irrepressible Point, Stamkos, Kucherov and Vasilevskiy. But they also need character players that keep getting better like Killorn, Palat, Cirelli, Gourde, etc.

Gourde was an ECHL player and also played for San Jose’s AHL affiliate in Worcester before the Lightning signed him as a free agent. It took a while, but look at him now. Would they have won even one of the two Cups without the energizer bunny as third-line center?

The Lightning nearly won a Cup with a veteran leader Brenden Morrow in 2015 on the fourth line. They signed another similar player for under $1 million before last season and the guy was just a little better. Pat Maroon, ala the “Big Rig,” gave the team another leader who could loosen up the room and give the stars more physical support on the ice. 

Champions also need surprises like Colton, a player getting his chance when injuries struck and running with it. When I first saw Colton at prospects camp in 2016 it appeared he had some offensive tools. But with any prospect, would he develop his body good enough to play in the NHL and did he have the proper drive and patience to keep moving forward?

Colton answered loudly this season. Did you see his textbook play to score the Cup-clinching goal? Amazing.

Several players in the organization could have been him. It could have been Mitchell Stephens, maybe Boris Katchouk, Taylor Raddysh or Alex Barre Boulet. Remember Alexander Volkov, now with Anaheim, played his first career playoff game in the cup decider last year and performed just fine? Prospects are ready when they arrive in Tampa, thanks to Syracuse Crunch coach Benoit Groulx and his staff, among others.

There is always someone coming with the Lightning and that’s why you can’t count them out for a three-peat. This wondrous group will not be together again like the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as they go for their back-to-back Super Bowl titles later this year.

The salary cap will lead to some difficult goodbyes. 

What will the Lightning do? After what he has done the last two years, you have to have faith in Brisebois and his staff.

You cannot expect Savard, Coleman and Barclay Goodrow to be back as unrestricted free agents. Coleman and Goodrow deserve to go out and make some good money, which they have justly earned. I expect Coleman to get multi years at $4 million-plus and Goodrow at least in the 2.5-3 range. Coleman scored huge goals, especially in Game 2 of the finals, and Goodrow made key play after key play. As I remarked on twitter after it was over - Goodrow is one heck of a hockey player. He’s the perfect third-line digger that a championship team needs.

The rest will be even more difficult. The Lightning might be able to shed Tyler Johnson’s final three years at $5 million after his improved playoff performance, perhaps to the expansion Seattle Kraken near his home in Spokane.

A lot will depend on how Brisebois can deal with Kraken GM Ronnie Francis. Does Francis want to play hardball and steal a veteran forward or a top young prospect from the Bolts? Who does Brisebois protect? Will it only take the Lightning’s 2022 first rounder to get things done?

If JB goes with seven forwards and three defensemen, the guess is - Stamkos, Kucherov, Point, Cirelli, Palat, Killorn and Gourde along with Hedman, Erik Cernak and Mikhail Sergachev. As great as McDonagh has been, Seattle may not want five years at $6.75 left on his contract anyway. After winning two cups though, the cap space moving on from him would be very helpful and Cernak has got to be a keeper as the No. 1 right-handed D man on the roster, right? If he cannot deal with Francis, does JB protect guys like Colton, Katchouk and Joseph and realize he will lose just one veteran?

Wild idea to forget in a few seconds? Trade Sergachev to the Western Conference for a huge haul of picks and/or strong young prospects. Keep the best duo of lefty d men in the league in their early 30s.

Ok, crazy.

And, as an aside, Stamkos should not be traded. That's silly. Maybe at the end of his contract (before 2024-25), two years from now or when Point is up for a new deal (2022-23), the captain will depart Tampa. Not in 2021.

No doubt, there will be a lot of trades with Seattle. Colorado, Florida, Minnesota and Nashville will lose a very good player or give up a ton to the Kraken. If McDonagh stays and they protect four D men, the Lightning may have to part with Killorn or Palat, or perhaps Gourde - along with Johnson.

The lineup I came up with is this one (assuming Seattle takes McDonagh and Barre-Boulet - as a sweetener with Johnson - while Goodrow, Coleman and Savard move on):

Palat-Point-Kucherov

Colton-Cirelli-Stamkos

Killorn-Gourde-Joseph (you could flip Colton and Killorn)


Maroon-Stephens-Katchouk

Raddysh

Hedman-Rutta

Sergachev-Cernak


Lefty D signed or traded for at about $1 million- Foote

Luke Schenn

Vasilevskiy-Mike Smith (FA signing)

Just a thought. But the money can work with that lineup. JB will have to be creative, but man, isn't it much easier after winning two straight Cups?

Lightning fans will always have 2020 and 2021. Take all the hate from outside. Laugh it off. Don’t be snobby about it. Use it as more motivation to do it again without pressure.

There are more good things to come for this organization. As long as the core stays together, Murray keeps picking gems and the development process stays the same, the Lightning should be competitive every year.

Some day, things will change. People move on. But the memories last forever.

For now, enjoy the view from the top of the mountain.