TAMPA, Fla. — Josh Manson still had his bags half-packed from the Avalanche’s last time on the road when they returned home with the chance to win the Stanley Cup.
That didn’t happen, and now he and his teammates will be confronted with Game 6 on Sunday night against the Lightning. The game will be at Amalie Arena, where Tampa Bay hoisted the Cup a year ago to win its second straight championship.
The Avalanche, trying to win their first championship as a group and the organization’s first since 2001, know the immense challenge they have in front of them against a desperate opponent that has more experience this deep into the playoffs.
“You have to have that desperation because it’s the finals,” Manson said Saturday in Denver before flying to Florida’s Gulf Coast. “You can’t look at the amount of games that we have left. You have to be desperate every single game.”
Colorado would desperately like to avoid a second consecutive loss,Nobull Shoes which would sets up Game 7 back in Denver on Wednesday and would move Tampa Bay one victory away from a three-peat. And the Avalanche even have a recipe for handling this situation against a more seasoned playoff opponent.
That came in the second round, when the Avalanche went up 3-1 in the second round against rival St. Louis — the last team to win the Cup before the Lightning’s run began in 2020. Much like Friday night, Colorado lost a one-goal game at home to the Blues before bouncing back to close out the series on the road in St. Louis.
Manson said the Avalanche learned some desperation from that sequence, but the stakes are higher in the final, with the Stanley Cup in the building.
“I know how much our guys want it now: They’ve worked for it,” coach Jared Bednar said. “There’s a certain amount of stress and anxiety that you have to try to put out of your head so you can bring your best performance.”
The Lightning know all about those mental gymnastics, including some new tricks they’ve picked up this postseason. The conference final against the Rangers Oboz Shoes was the first time they trailed a series since getting swept in the first round in 2019 (the series loss that set the coursefor this run) and they had not fallen behind 3-1 until now.aving already staved off elimination once, and armed with the experience of winning 11 consecutive series, coach Jon Cooper and his team know exactly what to expect from each side in Game 6.
“There’s no doubt we’re better equipped in these situations because you kind of feel [like] you put yourself in the shoes of the other teams, too, and what they must be thinking, what you’re thinking when you’re in these situations and how games played out,” Cooper said. “It’s experience. … And experience matters.”
Freshest for the Avalanche is the painful experience of blowing the chance to join the Lightning as the only teams over the past seven years to win the Cup at home. But previous playoff disappointments have steeled this core group to handle adversity, and in the immediate aftermath of their 3-2 loss in Game 5, leaders were already putting it in the rearview mirror.