@Lightning de Tampa Bay

Match inaugural du Lightning de Tampa Bay 1992 contre les Blackhawks de Chicago (jeu complet)



Le premier match de saison régulière de l’histoire du Lightning de Tampa Bay a eu lieu contre les Blackhawks de Chicago à l’Expo Hall le 7 octobre 1992. La nuit où le hockey de la LNH est officiellement arrivé dans le Sunshine State. La qualité vidéo n’est pas excellente, mais c’est quand même un excellent jeu.

30 Comments

  1. Have a puck w/barn blue paint on it signed by Phil & Tony! Thanks for this stream. My vcr died years ago so my 2 tapes are artifacts(like my 8-tracks).

  2. They really tore Belfour a new one this game. Interestingly enough, Eddie came back to win the Vezina the same season.

  3. Bunch of bullshitt today they didn't even show up except for the first 10 minutes if that's gonna be their best effort just give them the series now

  4. I don't care what anyone says the attitude should been work work work go hard or go home they're attitude was oh these games don't mean anything speaking of the round robin games and that attitude is showing its ugly head it goes back to the coach if its not important to him it damm sure won't be important to the players if they get eliminated again in the first round then as much as I hate to say it Coop needs to go we need a coach that will light a fire under their ass and keep it lit I love Coop but today's game 2 was a bunch of bullshitt

  5. I watched a few Bolts games the first season but I don’t remember this goalie. I only remember Puuuuupppaaaaa

  6. Along with the present-day Ottawa Senators, the Lightning made their debut on my birth year. This will be the only year the Lightning are playing in the Norris Division (similar to the Buccaneers playing in the NFC Central).

  7. Somehow, the Lightning's Cup Final rivals have something here:

    They had Marc Bergevin (the current GM of the Canadiens), they were coached by Terry Crisp (coach who led Calgary to a Stanley Cup), they had Chicago as an opponent (whom they lost in 2015), and one player (Shawn Chambers) ended his career in Dallas (and somehow won his Stanley Cup there).

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