2015 Stanley Cup Finals


The 2015 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's season, and the culmination of the 2015 Stanley Cup playoffs. The Western Conference champion Chicago Blackhawks defeated the Eastern Conference champion Tampa Bay Lightning four games to two to win their sixth championship in franchise history, and their third title in six seasons.
The Lightning, as the club with the better regular-season record, held home-ice advantage in the series. The best-of-seven series was played in a 2–2–1–1–1 format, with Tampa Bay hosting games one, two, five, and seven ; and Chicago hosting games three, four and six. The series started June 3 and ended on June 15.
Tyler Johnson and Patrick Kane led the Stanley Cup playoffs in points scored with 23 points each.

Paths to the Finals

Tampa Bay Lightning

This was Tampa Bay's second Finals appearance after winning the Cup in. Since their win in 2004, the Lightning had lost in the Conference Finals in 2011 in seven games to the Boston Bruins. The Lightning were eliminated in the first round in 2006, 2007, and 2014.
The Lightning entered the 2014–15 season with major re-signings during the offseason including centre Tyler Johnson, wingers Ryan Callahan and Ondrej Palat, and goalie Ben Bishop. In free agency, Tampa Bay picked up centre Brian Boyle and defenceman Anton Stralman from the New York Rangers and Brenden Morrow from the St. Louis Blues. The team made two trades to bolster the defence, picking up Jason Garrison at the 2014 draft and Braydon Coburn just before the 2015 trade deadline.
Tampa Bay compiled 108 points during the regular season to finish in second place in the Atlantic Division. Centre and team captain Steven Stamkos finished second in goal-scoring during the regular season with 43 goals. Earlier in the season, Head Coach Jon Cooper nicknamed the team's second line of Johnson, Palat and winger Nikita Kucherov as the "Triplets" because they were so in sync; at the mid-season in January, the three players led the League in plus-minus.
In the playoffs, the Lightning eliminated the Detroit Red Wings in seven games, the Montreal Canadiens in six games, and the New York Rangers in the Conference Finals in seven games. They became the first post-1967 expansion team to beat three Original Six teams on the way to the Stanley Cup Finals and the only team in NHL history to face an Original Six team at every stage of the playoffs.

Chicago Blackhawks

The Finals marked Chicago's third Final appearance in six seasons; having won the Cup in both and. This was the team's 13th appearance overall, and they were seeking their sixth overall Cup championship.
The Blackhawks entered the 2014 offseason after being eliminated in the Conference Finals in seven games by the eventual Cup champion Los Angeles Kings. Major free agent acquisitions during the offseason included centre Brad Richards and winger Daniel Carcillo from the Rangers. Approaching the NHL trade deadline in early March, Chicago traded for defenceman Kimmo Timonen from the Philadelphia Flyers, centre Antoine Vermette from the Arizona Coyotes, and centre Andrew Desjardins from the San Jose Sharks.
Chicago finished in third place in the Central Division, earning 102 points. Goalie Corey Crawford tied the Canadiens' Carey Price as the William M. Jennings Trophy recipient for allowing a League-low 189 goals during the regular season.
In the playoffs, the Blackhawks eliminated the Nashville Predators in six games, swept the Minnesota Wild, and defeated the Anaheim Ducks in the Conference Finals in seven games.

Game summaries

Game one

In game one, Tampa Bay struck first with a deflected goal by Alex Killorn at 4:31 in the first period. The Lightning nursed the lead into the third period with a strong conservative defensive effort, but Teuvo Teravainen and Antoine Vermette scored 118 seconds apart to win the game 2–1 for the Blackhawks. By assisting on Vermette's goal, Teravainen became the second-youngest player in NHL history, after Jaromir Jagr had two assists in game one of the Finals, to have a multi-point game in the Stanley Cup final.

Game two

Jason Garrison's power play goal at 8:49 of the third period proved to be the difference in Tampa Bay's victory in game two. Lightning starting goaltender Ben Bishop had left the game moments earlier for reasons that were undisclosed at the time, but was later revealed to be a torn groin. He was replaced with Andrei Vasilevskiy who was credited with his first playoff victory. He also became the first goalie to win a Stanley Cup Finals game in relief of an injured starter since Lester Patrick helped the New York Rangers defeat the Montreal Maroons in overtime of game two of the 1928 Stanley Cup Finals, 2–1.

Game three

The series switched to Chicago for game three. There was some debate who would start for Tampa Bay, but regular starter Ben Bishop started the game for Tampa Bay. For the third time in a row, Tampa Bay struck first, on Ryan Callahan's slapshot goal at 5:09 of the first. Brad Richards tied it up on a power-play goal and the teams were tied after the first period. The first period was dominated by Chicago, who outshot Tampa Bay 19–7. The second period was dominated by Tampa Bay, which outshot Chicago 17–7, but there was no scoring. In the third period, Brandon Saad gave Chicago its first lead at 4:14, but Tampa Bay countered on the next shift on a goal by Ondrej Palat to tie the score once again. Late in the third period, Victor Hedman led a rush down ice for Tampa Bay and passed to Cedric Paquette who scored to put the Lightning ahead again. The Lightning were able to defend their lead to win the game 3–2 and take a series lead two games to one.

Game four

The Lightning chose to rest injured goaltender Ben Bishop for game four in favor of rookie Andrei Vasilevskiy. The Lightning protected Vasilevskiy with tight defensive play, allowing only two shots by the Blackhawks in the first period, which was scoreless. For the first time in the series, the Blackhawks scored the first goal, on a goal by Jonathan Toews at 6:40 of the second. Alex Killorn tied it for the Lightning at 11:47 and the game was tied 1–1 after two periods. In the third, the Blackhawks' Brandon Saad muscled his way to the goal and scored on a backhand past Vasilevskiy at 6:22 to put the Blackhawks ahead. The game's pace picked up as the Lightning tried to tie the score but the Blackhawks goaltender Corey Crawford made several outstanding saves to shut out Tampa Bay the rest of the way. The win tied the series at two games apiece. It was the first time since that the first four Stanley Cup Finals games were all decided by one goal.

Game five

The series returned to Tampa for game five and Ben Bishop returned to the net for the Lightning. The Blackhawks scored first for the second consecutive game, this time on a miscue by Bishop and Lightning defenceman Victor Hedman. The two collided and Patrick Sharp skated to the empty net with the puck, scoring at 6:11 of the first, a lead they held until 10:53 of the second when Valtteri Filppula scored to tie the score 1–1. The teams were tied going into the third, but Antoine Vermette scored for the Blackhawks at 2:00 of third and the lead held up as the Blackhawks played tight defence the rest of the way. The Blackhawks took the lead in the series three games to two, to give themselves a chance to win the Cup at home, something the franchise has not done since. For the second time in Finals history and the first since, wherein all five games that had to be played went to overtime, all games of the series through game five have been decided by one goal, with neither team leading by more than one goal.

Game six

In game six, the teams were tied 0–0 after the first period. In the first period, Steven Stamkos put a shot off the crossbar and was stopped on a breakaway early in the second by Corey Crawford but it was the Blackhawks who scored first on a goal by Duncan Keith on a rebound of his own shot near the end of the second period to put Chicago ahead 1–0 after two periods. In the third period, the Blackhawks' Patrick Kane scored on a pass from Brad Richards and play by Brandon Saad to put the 'Hawks ahead 2–0, the first two-goal lead of the series. The Blackhawks then frustrated the Lightning the rest of the way to win the game 2–0, a shutout for Crawford and the Stanley Cup championship. It was revealed after the game that the Lightning's goaltender Ben Bishop had played with a torn groin muscle since game two and Tyler Johnson was playing with a fractured wrist, injured in game one. This was also the first time since 1938, when they beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in the fourth game of a best-of-five Finals at Chicago Stadium, and the first time at the United Center that the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup on home ice.

Team rosters

Chicago Blackhawks

#NatPlayerPositionHandAgeAcquiredPlace of birthFinals appearance
29LWL292004Bowmanville, Ontariosecond
13LWL302014King City, Ontariothird
50GL302003Montreal, Quebecsecond
26DL282014Abbotsford, British Columbiafirst
33GL262014Newport News, Virginiafirst
11LWL282015Lively, Ontariofirst
4DL272005Eksjö, Swedenthird
81RWL362009Stará Ľubovňa, Czechoslovakiafifth
88RWL262007Buffalo, New Yorkthird
2ADL312002Winnipeg, Manitobathird
16CL252009Stockholm, Swedensecond
42CL232010Stockholm, Swedenfirst
27DL332012Stockholm, Swedensecond
31GL262013Rauma, Finlandfirst
91CL352014Murray Harbour, Prince Edward Islandthird
32DR362012Vlašim, Czechoslovakiasecond
5DR242013Lycksele, Swedenfirst
20LWL222011Pittsburgh, Pennsylvaniasecond
7DR302003Richmond, British Columbiathird
10ALWR332005Winnipeg, Manitobathird
65RWR232011Belleville, Ontariosecond
86RWL202012Helsinki, Finlandfirst
44DL402015Kuopio, Finlandsecond
19CCL272006Winnipeg, Manitobathird
57DR232014Middletown, New Jerseyfirst
80CL322015Saint-Agapit, Quebecsecond
23LWR292013Lethbridge, Albertasecond

Tampa Bay Lightning

#NatPlayerPositionHandAgeAcquiredPlace of birthFinals appearance
30GL282013Denver, Coloradofirst
11CL302014Hingham, Massachusettssecond
23RWR242013Burnsville, Minnesotafirst
25DL302012Anchorage, Alaskasecond
55DL302015Calgary, Albertasecond
24RWR302014Rochester, New Yorkfirst
27LWL202013Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Quebecfirst
51CL312013Vantaa, Finlandthird
5DL302014White Rock, British Columbiafirst
50GL222013Aizkraukle, Latviafirst
77DL242009Örnsköldsvik, Swedenfirst
9CR242011Spokane, Washingtonfirst
17CL252007Halifax, Nova Scotiafirst
86RWL212011Maykop, Russiafirst
42CR242014Cap-Rouge, Quebecfirst
10LWL362014Carlyle, Saskatchewansecond
90CL222011Voskresensk, Russiafirst
89DL222011Chelyabinsk, Russiafirst
18LWR242011Frýdek-Místek, Czechoslovakiafirst
13CL212012Gaspé, Quebecfirst
91CCR252008Markham, Ontariofirst
6DR282014Tibro, Swedensecond
62DR242013Plzeň, Czechoslovakiafirst
88GL202012Tyumen, Russiafirst

Chicago Blackhawks – 2015 Stanley Cup champions

The 2015 Stanley Cup was presented to Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews by NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman following the Blackhawks' 2–0 win over the Lightning in game six.

Television

In the U.S., the Finals were split between NBC and NBCSN, called by NBC Sports' lead commentary team of Mike Emrick, Eddie Olczyk and Pierre McGuire; it was originally announced that games two and three were to be broadcast by NBCSN, with the remainder on NBC. Game two was moved to NBC to serve as a lead-out for its coverage of the 2015 Belmont Stakes in favor of game four on NBCSN. As Olczyk was also a contributor to NBC's Belmont coverage, he was absent during game two.
In Canada, all six games were broadcast by CBC Television in English, TVA Sports in French, and Omni Television in Punjabi. These were the first Stanley Cup Finals under Rogers Communications' exclusive national broadcast rights to the NHL in Canada.
This was the second-most watched Stanley Cup Finals on U.S. television since 1995, trailing only the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals, with an average 3.2 Nielsen rating and 5.6 million viewers on NBC and NBCSN. Game six was seen by 7.6 million viewers nationally on NBC. Ratings for game six were especially strong in Chicago and Tampa Bay: it was the most-watched NHL broadcast locally in Chicago history, and the second-highest in Tampa Bay. By contrast, ratings in Canada dropped significantly, making it the lowest-rated Stanley Cup Final since 2009. Game six, facing competition from a Team Canada match in the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, and the Toronto Blue Jays, was the lowest-rated deciding NHL playoff game on Canadian television since the 2003 Stanley Cup Finals.
GameNetworkRatings
American audience
1NBC3.35.547
2NBC3.96.549
3NBCSN2.23.896
4NBCSN2.23.914
5NBC3.05.260
6NBC4.48.005