Fast foes: Finalists feel need for speed
It will be speed vs. speed in the Stanley Cup Final between the Sharks and Penguins.
The Sharks got through the Western Conference the same way the Penguins got through the East: with plenty of depth and speed to burn. The Final will feature the three top playoff scorers in the Sharks' Logan Couture, Joe Pavelski and Brent Burns against Penguins stars Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.
“It's going to be fast hockey,” Crosby said after the Penguins beat the Lightning in Game 7 of the East finals Thursday night. “Two teams that want to play the exact same way, that want to get their ‘D' involved [and] their power play is really dangerous. It's going to be quite the series.”
The Sharks are in the Stanley Cup Final for the first time in their 24-season history and in Peter DeBoer's first year as coach. The Penguins are back for the first time since winning it all in 2009 and made it after Mike Sullivan replaced Mike Johnston as coach in December.
In his first meeting with them, Sullivan challenged his players to be great and told them that's how they win in the NHL. They've won in the playoffs on the strength of scoring from Crosby and speedy wingers Phil Kessel, Carl Hagelin and Game 7 hero Bryan Rust, not to mention the goaltending of 22-year-old rookie Matt Murray.
Kessel is the Penguins' leading scorer with 18 points on nine goals and nine assists after coming over from the Maple Leafs in a trade last summer.
“I don't think you could dream about that. You never could expect this,” Kessel said. “This is a huge moment in my career and my life.”
The Sharks are also rolling along thanks to a summer pickup in goaltender Martin Jones, who was the Kings' backup when they won the Cup in 2014. Couture, Pavelski and Burns are piling up the points, but this run is about aging veterans Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau finally breaking through.
Thornton and Marleau, the top two picks in the 1997 draft, made the playoffs together with the Sharks in nine of 10 previous seasons but had yet to make the Final until now.
Crosby and Malkin made it twice, losing in 2008 to the Red Wings before winning the following season in a rematch. It looked like the young core that also featured defenseman Kris Letang would challenge for the Cup every year.
Now they have a chance to add to their legacy, but it won't be easy even with home-ice advantage in the series that starts Monday night in Pittsburgh.
“The Penguins should expect a team that's deeper, quicker than Tampa, and a team that's playing with a lot of confidence,” said NBC Sports analyst Ed Olczyk, a former player (1996-1998) and coach (2003-2006) for the Penguins.