The Tampa Bay Lightning
are a professional ice hockey team based in Tampa, Florida. They are members of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). They have one Stanley Cup championship in their history, in 2004. The team is commonly referred to as the Bolts
, and the nickname is used on their current third jersey. They play their home games at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa.
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Franchise history
Early years
In the late 1980s, the NHL announced that it would expand. Two rival groups from the Tampa/
St. Petersburg area decided to bid for a franchise: a St. Petersburg-based group fronted by future
Hartford Whalers/
Carolina Hurricanes owners
Peter Karmanos and
Jim Rutherford, and a Tampa-based group led by two
Hall of Famers –
Phil Esposito and his brother
Tony.
On paper, it looked like the Karmanos/Rutherford group was the frontrunner. Not only was the Karmanos/Rutherford group better financed, but one of Esposito's key backers, the
Pritzker family, had backed out a few months before the bid. Esposito eventually recruited a consortium of
Japanese businesses headed by Kokusai Green, a
Japanese golf course and resort operator. The prospect of Japanese backing tipped the scales in the Esposito group's favor, and they were awarded an expansion franchise for the
1992–93 season, as was a group in
Ottawa (which became the
Ottawa Senators). One of the limited partners in the new Tampa Bay team was
New York Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner (who lives in Tampa during the year).
[1]
According to former NHL president
Gil Stein, another factor was that the Karmanos/Rutherford group wanted to pay only $29 million before starting play, while the Esposito group was one of the few willing to pay the $50 million expansion fee without reservations.
[2]
After being awarded the franchise, the team's management brought in star power before they had any players. Phil Esposito installed himself as president and
general manager, while Tony became chief scout.
Terry Crisp, who played for the
Philadelphia Flyers when they won two
Stanley Cups in the mid-1970s, and coached the
Calgary Flames to a Cup in
1989, was tapped as the first head coach. The team was named the Lightning, after Tampa's status as the "Lightning Capital of North America."
Phil Esposito initially attempted to recreate the mystique from the powerhouse Bruins of the 70s; he hired former linemate
Wayne Cashman as an assistant coach, former Bruin trainer John "Frosty" Forristal as the team's trainer, and the inaugural team photo has him flanked by Cashman and player
Ken Hodge, Jr., son of his other Bruins' linemate. The team turned heads in the preseason when
Manon Rhéaume became the first woman to play in an NHL game, making her first of two NHL appearances in an exhibition game against the
St. Louis Blues.
The Lightning first took the ice on
October 7, 1992, playing in Tampa's tiny 11,000-seat
Expo Hall at the Florida State Fairgrounds. They shocked the visiting
Chicago Blackhawks 7-3 with four goals by little-known
Chris Kontos, a scoring mark unmatched by any Lightning player. The Bolts shot to the top of the
Campbell Conference's
Norris Division within a month, behind Kontos' initial torrid scoring pace and a breakout season by forward
Brian Bradley. However, they buckled under the strain of some of the longest road trips in the league — their nearest division rival was
St. Louis, over 1,000 miles from Tampa — and finished in last place. Their 53 points in 1992-93, however, was one of the best showings ever by an NHL expansion team. Bradley's 42 goals gave Tampa Bay fans optimism for the next season; it would be a team record until the 2006–07 season when
Vincent Lecavalier passed it with a career high 52 goals.
The following season saw the Lightning shift to the
Eastern Conference's
Atlantic Division, as well as move into the
Florida Suncoast Dome (a building originally designed for baseball) in St. Petersburg, which was reconfigured for hockey and renamed "the Thunderdome." The team picked up
goaltender Daren Puppa,
left-wing goal scorer
Petr Klima and aging sniper
Denis Savard. While Puppa's play resulted in a significant improvement in goals allowed (from 332 to 251), Savard was long past his prime and Klima's scoring was offset by his defensive lapses. The Lightning finished last in the Atlantic Division. Another disappointing season followed in the lockout-shortened
1995 season. Still, the Lightning appeared to be far ahead of their expansion brethren, the
Ottawa Senators. In marked contrast to the Lightning, the Senators showed almost no sign of respectability in their first four seasons.
From great success to utter failure
In their fourth season,
1995–96, with Bradley still leading the team in scoring, second-year forward
Alexander Selivanov scoring 31 goals, and
Roman Hamrlik (the team's first-ever draft choice in
1992) having an All-Star year on defense, the Bolts finally qualified for the playoffs, nosing out the defending
Stanley Cup champion
New Jersey Devils for the eighth spot in the Eastern Conference by a single game. Although they lost their first-round series in six games to the
Philadelphia Flyers, it still remains a magical season for Lightning fans. The Thunderdome crowd of 28,183 for the
April 23 playoff game against the Flyers was the largest crowd for any NHL game, a record that stood until the
2003 Heritage Classic in
Edmonton.
The Lightning picked up sniper
Dino Ciccarelli from the
Detroit Red Wings during the 1996 off-season, and he did not disappoint, scoring 35 goals in the
1996–97 season, with
Chris Gratton notching another 30. The team unveiled a glittering new arena, the Ice Palace (now the
St. Pete Times Forum) and appeared destined for another playoff spot. However, the Lightning suffered a devastating rash of injuries early in the season. Puppa developed back trouble that would limit him to a total of 50 games from 1996 until his retirement in
2000. Bradley also lost time to a series of injuries that would limit him to a total of 49 games from 1996 until his retirement in December 1999.
Center John Cullen developed
non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and missed the last 12 games of the 1996–97 season; he would eventually be forced to retire in 1999. Decimated by these ailments, the Lightning narrowly missed the playoffs. It would be seven years before the Lightning would even come close to the playoffs again.
Most of the Lightning's early stars were gone by
1998 due to free agency and trades by Phil Esposito which backfired. Crisp was fired eleven games into the
1997–98 season and replaced by
Jacques Demers. Though Demers had presided over the resurgence of the
Detroit Red Wings in the 1980s and helmed a Stanley Cup run in
Montreal in 1993, he was unable to change the team's fortunes, and the Lightning ended up losing 55 games.
By all accounts, the Lightning's plunge to the bottom of the NHL was due to the way Kokusai Green ran the team. Rumors abounded as early as the team's second season that the Lightning were on the brink of
bankruptcy and that the team was part of a
money laundering scheme for the
yakuza (Japanese crime families).
[3] Its scouting operation consisted of Tony Esposito and several satellite dishes. The
Internal Revenue Service investigated the team in 1994 and 1995, and nearly slapped a lien on the team for $750,000 in back taxes. The situation led longtime NHL broadcaster and writer
Stan Fischler to call the Lightning a "skating vaudeville show."
[4]
Even in their first playoff season, the team was awash in red ink and Kokusai Green wanted to sell it; however, the sale was hampered by the team's murky ownership structure. Even some team officials (including Crisp) did not know who owned the team, and one person listed as a major shareholder reportedly did not even exist.
Another problem was that Kokusai Green initially demanded $230 million for the team, including the lease with the Ice Palace.
It later emerged that Kokusai Green's owner, Takashi Okubo, had never met with Esposito or with NHL officials in person prior to being awarded the Lightning. During his seven years as owner, Okubo never watched his team play, and never even visited Tampa. Esposito never met him personally in his hunt for investors, for instance. Nearly all of Kokusai Green's investment in the team and the Ice Palace came in the form of loans, leaving the team constantly short of cash.
In fact, the first time anyone connected with the Lightning or the NHL even saw him was in the spring of 1998. Many of Esposito's trades came simply to keep the team above water. The team's financial situation was a considerable concern to NHL officials; rumors surfaced that the league was seriously considering taking control of the team if Okubo failed to find a buyer by the summer of 1998.
Forbes
wrote an article in late 1997 calling the Lightning a financial nightmare, with a debt equal to a staggering 236% of its value — the highest of any major North American sports franchise. Even though the Ice Palace was built for hockey and the Lightning were the only major tenant, Forbes called the team's deal with the arena a lemon since it would not result in much revenue for 30 years. It was also behind on paying state sales taxes and federal payroll taxes.
Finally, in 1998, Kokusai Green found a buyer. Although
Detroit Pistons owner
William Davidson was thought to be the frontrunner, the buyer turned out to be
insurance tycoon and motivational speaker
Art Williams. Williams walked into a difficult financial situation; the team was $102 million in debt at the time the sale closed.
Like the Japanese, Williams knew very little about hockey. However, he was very visible and outspoken, and immediately pumped an additional $6 million into the team's payroll to turn it around. He also cleared most of the massive debt left over from the Kokusai Green era. After taking control, Williams publicly assured the Espositos that their jobs were safe, only to fire them two games into the 1998–99 season; Demers became general manager as well as coach. Despite the clouds still hovering over the franchise, 1998 saw the Bolts draft
Vincent Lecavalier, a player who would be a cornerstone of the team for years to come.
Williams was widely seen as being in over his head and was an easy target for his NHL colleagues, who called him "
Jed Clampett" behind his back because of his thick Southern accent and
fundamentalist Christian views. Early in the 1998–99 season, the Lightning lost 10 games in a row, all but ending any chance of making the playoffs. They ended up losing 54 games that year — more than the expansion
Nashville Predators. Although some blame Williams for the slide, it can be argued that the damage from the Kokusai Green era was too much for Williams to overcome.
Return to respectability
By the spring of 1999, Williams had seen enough. He had not attended a game in some time because "this team broke my heart." He lost $20 million in the 1998–99 season alone — as much money in one year as he'd estimated he could have reasonably lost in five years.
Image:TampaBayLightningAlternate.png
|thumb|right|150px|Tampa Bay's previous alternate logo (1993–2007)Current Arm Patch Logo.
Williams sold the team for $115 million — $2 million less than he had paid for the team a year earlier — to Davidson, who had almost bought the team a year earlier. Along with the sale, the Lightning picked up a new top minor league affiliate; Davidson also owned the
Detroit Vipers of the now-defunct
International Hockey League.
Davidson remained in Detroit, but appointed Tom Wilson as team president to handle day-to-day management of the team. Wilson immediately fired Demers, who despite his best efforts (and fatherly attitude toward Lecavalier) was unable to overcome the damage from the Kokusai Green ownership. Wilson persuaded
Ottawa Senators general manager
Rick Dudley to take over as the Bolts' new general manager; Dudley in turn brought Vipers coach
Steve Ludzik in as the team's new head coach. Wilson, Dudley, and Ludzik had helped make the Vipers one of the premier minor league hockey franchises, having won a
Turner Cup in only their third season in Detroit (the team had originally been based in
Salt Lake City).
However, as had been the case with Demers, the damage from the last few seasons under Kokusai Green was too much for Ludzik to overcome. Even with a wholesale transfer of talent from Detroit to Tampa (a move that eventually doomed the Vipers, which folded along with the IHL in 2001), the Lightning lost 54 games in
1999–2000 and 52 in
2000–01, becoming the first team in NHL history to post four straight 50-loss seasons. The lone bright spots in those years were the blossoming of Lecavalier and
Brad Richards into NHL stars. Ludzik was replaced in early 2001 by career NHL assistant
John Tortorella.
The
2001–02 season, Tortorella's first full year behind the bench, saw some improvement. While finishing far out of playoff contention, the Lightning at least showed some signs of life, earning more than 60 points for the first time since 1997. Tortorella stripped Lecavalier of the captaincy due to contract negotiations that had made the young center miss the start of the season.
Two dream seasons — and the Stanley Cup
With a young core of players led by Lecavalier, Richards,
Martin St. Louis, and
Fredrik Modin, the Lightning were thought to be very close to respectability. However, they arrived somewhat earlier than expected in
2002–03. The young team was led by the goaltending of
Nikolai Khabibulin and the scoring efforts of Lecavalier, St. Louis, Modin, Richards, and
Ruslan Fedotenko, and also boasted a new captain, former prolific scorer
Dave Andreychuk. Throughout the season, the Lightning battled the
Washington Capitals for first place in the Southeast Division. They finished with 93 points, breaking the 90-point barrier for the first time in team history. They won the division by just one point, giving them home-ice advantage in their first round match-up with Washington.
The Lightning quickly fell two games behind in the series but followed the two losses with four consecutive wins which advanced them to the Conference Semifinals for the first time in team history. In the semifinals the Lightning won only one game, losing the series to the
New Jersey Devils. The Devils went on to win the Stanley Cup, but the Bolts' return to the post-season pleased the long-suffering hockey fans of the Tampa Bay area.
The Lightning roared through the
2003–04 regular season, finishing with 106 points, second-best in the league after the Western Conference's
Detroit Red Wings – the first 100-point season in franchise history. The Lightning went through the season with only 20 man-games lost to injury. In the first round of the playoffs, the Lightning ousted the
Alexei Yashin-led
New York Islanders in five games, with solid play from goaltender
Nikolai Khabibulin, who posted 3 shutouts in games 1, 3, and 4.
In the second round, the Lightning faced the
Montreal Canadiens, captained by
Saku Koivu; Lecavalier, Richards, and Khabibulin led the team to a four-game sweep of Montreal. They next faced
Keith Primeau and his
Philadelphia Flyers in the Conference Finals. After a tightly-fought seven-game series in which neither team was able to win consecutive games,
Fredrik Modin notched the winning goal of the seventh and deciding game, earning the Eastern Conference Championship for the Lightning and their first-ever berth in the
Stanley Cup Finals.
Tampa Bay's opponent in the final round was the
Calgary Flames, captained by
Jarome Iginla. The final round also went the full seven games, with the deciding game played in the St. Pete Times Forum on
June 7, 2004. This time,
Ruslan Fedotenko was the Game 7 hero, scoring both Lightning goals in a 2-1 victory.
Brad Richards, who had 26 points, won the
Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the Stanley Cup playoffs; the Lightning had won all 31 contests in which he had scored a goal since the opening of the season. Tortorella won the
Jack Adams Award as the NHL's Coach of the Year. Only three years after losing 50 games, the Lightning became the southernmost team ever to win the Stanley Cup, in only their 12th year of existence.
Martin St. Louis led the team and the NHL with 94 points (his 38 goals were fourth-most after the 41 of tied trio Iginla,
Rick Nash, and
Ilya Kovalchuk), and won the
Hart Memorial Trophy as the league's most valuable player. St. Louis also won the
Lester B. Pearson Award for league's most outstanding player as voted by the NHL Players' Association, and tied the
Vancouver Canucks'
Marek Malik for the
NHL Plus/Minus Award.
The Lightning had to wait a year to defend their title due to the
2004–05 NHL lockout, but in
2005–06 they barely made the playoffs with 93 points in a conference where six teams notched 100 or more points. They lost to the
Ottawa Senators in five games in the first round.
2006–07 season: Another short postseason
During the offseason, the Lightning traded
Fredrik Modin and
Fredrik Norrena, to the
Columbus Blue Jackets for goaltender
Marc Denis, to replace
John Grahame, who had served as the Lightning's goaltender throughout most of the
2005–06 season, as he left the team, and signed with the
Carolina Hurricanes. Free agent
Johan Holmqvist would eventually get the majority of playing time, and most of the club's wins. The first half of the
2006-07 NHL Season was rocky for the Lightning, maintaining an 18-19-2 record throughout the first few months. January and February were far better months for the team, going 9-4-0 in January, and 9-2-2 in February, getting them back into the thick of things in the playoff race. 14 games in March were split even, and on
March 16,
2007,
Vincent Lecavalier broke the franchise record for most points in a season, with 95 (finishing with 108). The record was previously held by
Martin St. Louis, who had set the record in the 2003–04 Stanley Cup Championship year. Lecavalier also broke the franchise's goal scoring record, finishing with a league-leading 52 goals.
The Lightning were busy during the final weeks before the NHL Trade Deadline, acquiring wingers
Kyle Wanvig,
Stephen Baby, and defensemen
Shane O'Brien. Former first round pick
Nikita Alexeev was traded on the day of the deadline to the
Chicago Blackhawks. Other new additions for the team during the season were
Filip Kuba,
Luke Richardson, and
Doug Janik. Veteran
Andre Roy, who had won the
Stanley Cup with the Lightning in 2004, was claimed off waivers from the
Pittsburgh Penguins.
Throughout March, the Lightning had been switching places with the
Atlanta Thrashers for first place in the Southeast Division. With a chance to overtake the Thrashers one final time and once again become division champions for the third time in team history, on
April 6,
2007, in the final week of the regular season, the Lighting suffered a loss to the
Florida Panthers, the night before the season finale in Atlanta. That same night, the Thrashers defeated the
Carolina Hurricanes, and clinched the division. For the Lightning, this meant having to settle for the seventh seed in the
Eastern Conference, with a final record of 44-33-5 (93 points).
The Lightning were eliminated from playoff competition on April 22, after a 3-2 home loss to the New Jersey Devils in game six of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals.
Following their playoff exit, on
August 7,
2007, Absolute Hockey Enterprises, a group led by
Doug MacLean, announced it had signed a purchase agreement for the team and the
leasehold on the
St. Pete Times Forum. MacLean is the former president and general manager of the
Columbus Blue Jackets and former head coach for both the Blue Jackets and the
Florida Panthers. The group announced that it planned to keep the team in Tampa, but the deal fell apart during the 2007-08 season.
2007–08 season: Dead last
The Lightning struggled to maintain success during the 2007–2008 campaign. Although the "Big 3," (Lecavalier, St. Louis, and Richards) along with Vaclav Prospal, had performed up to expectations, they had little consistent play from supporting players.
At the start of the All-Star Break on
January 25, the Lightning had a 20–25–5 record, and with 45 points, were in last place in both the Southeast Division, and the Eastern Conference. Only the
Los Angeles Kings had a lower point total at this time of the season, with 40 points.
On February 13, 2008, it was announced that Palace Sports & Entertainment had agreed to sell the Lightning to OK Hockey LLC, a group headed by
Oren Koules, a producer of the
Saw horror movies.
The Lightning were active during the trade deadline, similar to the previous season. The more notable trades included
Vaclav Prospal being dealt to the
Philadelphia Flyers for
AHL All-Star defenseman
Alexandre Picard and a conditional draft pick.
[5] Former
Conn Smythe Trophy winner,
Brad Richards and goaltender
Johan Holmqvist were sent to the
Dallas Stars, for goaltender
Mike Smith, and forwards
Jussi Jokinen and
Jeff Halpern, as well as a fourth round pick in the
2009 NHL Entry Draft.
[6] One player with considerable ice time,
Jan Hlavac, was traded to the
Nashville Predators for a seventh round pick in the
2008 NHL Entry Draft.
[7] Defenseman
Dan Boyle, was re-signed to a 6-year contract extension, reportedly worth $40 million.
[8]
However, after the trade deadline, the Lightning fared no better than they had throughout the entire season. With the day of the deadline being
February 26, the Lightning won only five games after that date. Finishing with a 31–42–9 record, with 71 points, they had the best chance at getting the top overall pick in the
2008 NHL Entry Draft through the draft lottery, and was awarded the top overall pick by winning the draft lottery on
April 7. They would use their first overall pick to select
Steven Stamkos, who had been playing in the
Ontario Hockey League prior to the draft.
The Lightning were the worst team on the road in the NHL, winning only 11 games. Another showing of the team's poor play, was the difference from the previous season's success in the overtime/shootout periods. In the 2006–07 season, the Lightning had one of the best extra period records, winning 15 games in either overtime or the shootout. In the 2007–08 season, they won only 3 games, losing 9.
Vincent Lecavalier suffered a dislocated shoulder as the result of an open-ice hit from
Matt Cooke of the
Washington Capitals, in the game before the season finale in Atlanta. Lecavalier, who planned on having arthroscopic wrist surgery after the season's ending, would undergo surgery to repair his right shoulder as well. Cooke was fined $2,500 by the NHL for the hit, because Lecavalier did not have possession of the puck at the time. Lecavalier is expected to miss 12–15 weeks, but General Manager
Jay Feaster believes that Lecavalier will be "100 percent" at the start of training camp for the 2008–09 season.
[9]
John Tortorella was fired by the Lighting following their worst season since Tortorella was hired. At the time working as an NHL analyst for ESPN,
Barry Melrose stated on June 4 during an episode of
Pardon the Interruption that he missed coaching and would entertain any NHL coaching offers. He stated, "I miss not having a dog in the fight." On June 23, ESPN reported that Melrose had been chosen to be the head coach of the Tampa Bay Lightning, starting in the 2008-2009 NHL season. The next day, the Lightning officially introduced him as their new head coach.
2008–09 season: From bad to worse
The Lightning opened the season in the
Czech Republic against the
New York Rangers as a part of the
NHL's regular season "Premiere" that selects several teams to open the
NHL regular season in
Europe.
Barry Melrose would record his first win as a head coach in over 13 years on October 21, 2008 with a 3-2 victory over the
Atlanta Thrashers. However, the Lightning did not get off to a great start as hoped, and Melrose was fired by the Lightning with a 5-7-4 record.
Rick Tocchet, who had been hired as assistant coach during the previous offseason, was promoted to interim head coach.
On March 4 NHL veterans
Mark Recchi and
Olaf Kolzig were traded by the Tampa Bay Lightning to the
Boston Bruins and
Toronto Maple Leafs respectively.
The Lightning acquired top round picks
Matt Lashoff and
Martins Karsums from the Bruins.
Radio and television
The Lightning radio broadcasts are on
WDAE; the play-by-play announcer is
Dave Mishkin, known for his energetic style and his tendency to shriek when the Lightning score.
Phil Esposito is the color commentator for home games. Matthew Sammon is the pregame and intermission host. The Lightning television broadcasts can be seen on Sun Sports and locally on
WTOG. The television play-by-play announcer is
Rick Peckham. The color commentator is
Bobby Taylor. The studio host is
Paul Kennedy.
Todd Kalas and
Whit Watson also host in select home games.
Team colors and mascot
Since starting play, the Lightning colors have been blue, black and white. Their logo has been a stylized lightning bolt. This is the origin of one nickname for the team – the 'Bolts'.
Logo and jerseys
As with all NHL teams for the 2007–08 season, the Lightning debuted in new Reebok "Rbk Edge" jerseys. Also, like several other NHL teams, the Lightning updated their team logo.
The Lightning unveiled their new logo on
August 25,
2007. The new logo is similar to the old one, but with a more modern look. The new logo also kept the same theme as the previous one, but with the words "Tampa Bay" across the top now appearing with tall capital initials, and the word "Lightning" no longer appearing on the bottom of the logo.
New alternate jersey (2008–09)
Along with many other NHL teams, the Lightning debuted a new "Alternate" or "Third" jersey in the 2008–09 season. The jersey features a dominant "electric blue" color, with black and silver accents at the end of the sleeves. The logo is removed, and in its place emblazoned across the front of the jersey descending to the lower left of the jersey is the word "BOLTS" (utilizing a layout similar to that of the
New York Rangers alternate jersey). The numbers are featured on the back and sleeves only, using white lettering.
[10]
ThunderBug
The Lightning mascot is a
lightning bug named ThunderBug. He performs at games and makes appearances in the community. According to the Lightning website , his hobbies include "wrestling
Florida Panthers,
Shark fishing, hunting
Ducks, trap shooting
Thrashers and
Carolina Hog tying."
Lightning Girls
The Lightning also utilize a dance team known as the Lightning Girls at all home games and community events. The Tampa Bay Lightning Girls are a group of dancers who perform in the stands and clean the ice during breaks.
Season-by-season record
This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Lightning. For the full season-by-season history, see Tampa Bay Lightning seasons
Note:
GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes''
Records as of April 11, 2009. [11]
Season
| GP
| W
| L
| OTL
| Pts
| GF
| GA
| PIM
| Finish
| Playoffs
|
2004–05
| ''Season canceled because of 2004–05 NHL lockout
|
2005–06
| 82
| 43
| 33
| 6
| 92
| 252
| 260
| 947
| 2nd, Southeast
| Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1-4 (Senators)
|
2006–07
| 82
| 44
| 33
| 5
| 93
| 253
| 261
| 708
| 2nd, Southeast
| Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Devils)
|
2007–08
| 82
| 31
| 42
| 8
| 71
| 223
| 267
| 1022
| 5th, Southeast
| Did not qualify
|
2008–09
| 82
| 24
| 40
| 18
| 66
| 210
| 279
| 1280
| 5th, Southeast
| Did not qualify
|
Notable players
Current roster
Updated December 12, 2008.
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- List of NHL players
- List of NHL seasons
- List of Stanley Cup champions
References
- A Soap Opera on Ice
- Power Plays: An Inside Look at the Big Business of the National Hockey League
- Hockey Chronicles
- Cracked Ice: An Insider's Look at the NHL
- Tampa Bay Lightning - News: Lightning Acquire Conditional Draft Pick, AHL All-Star Defenseman From Philadelphia - 02/25/2008
- Tampa Bay Lightning - News: Lightning Acquire Goaltender Mike Smith, Center Jeff Halpern, Left Wing Jussi Jokinen & fourth-Round Pick From Dallas - 02/26/2008
- Tampa Bay Lightning - News: Lightning Acquire Seventh-Round Pick In 2008 From Nashville In Exchange For Jan Hlavac - 02/26/2008
- ESPN - Boyle signs six-year contract extension with Lightning - NHL
- http://www.tampabay.com/sports/hockey/lightning/article444830.ece Lightning star Lecavalier needs sh
- Lightning Unveil Third Jerseys vs. Devils
- Hockeydb.com, Tampa Bay Lightning season statistics and records.