When a heated scrum broke out between Islanders and Lightning players at the final horn of Game 2 and New York’s Travis Zajac wrestled Tampa Bay’s Anthony Cirelli to the ice, it did not feel like these teams didn’t face off all season.
âI think we are familiar with them from the last playoffs,â Lightning forward Ondrej Palat said.
With a few new faces, the Islanders and Lightning picked up their rivalry right where they left off in the 2020 bubble playoffs. That series and the other semifinal between the Vegas Golden Knights and Montreal Canadiens heated up early, showing it doesn’t take long for tensions to rise, even among players who haven’t seen each other â or been aggravated by each other â since last year.
“Weâre both in each otherâs way right now, so weâre not going to be liking each other,” Vegas enforcer Ryan Reaves said. âItâs two teams that are fighting for the Stanley Cup, and weâre two of four teams left, so itâs not going to take much. Thereâs going to be hatred thatâs going to build pretty quickly.â
The mutual dislike was evident in the series opener between the Golden Knights and Canadiens, the teams’ first meeting since January 2020. There was pushing and shoving after several whistles and more extracurricular activities than the lack of penalties would indicate.
It wasn’t surprising at this stage of the playoffs.
âAt this point in time, youâre fighting for every inch,â Golden Knights rookie Keegan Kolesar said. âNo oneâs going to give you anything easily, and everyoneâs going to work for it.â
The Islanders would like to outwork the Lightning between the whistles and not get bogged down in some of the antics that don’t affect the play. New York’s heavy style suits that, and coach Barry Trotz wants his players to âtry to stay out of the extra stuff.â
âOur team is disciplined enough,â Trotz said. âWeâve got to stay out of all that. Whistle to whistle we need to play hard 5 on 5, and weâll walk away from all that. The most important thing is trying to win the series and doing what it takes to win the series.â
Much like the Islanders did to Boston last round, Vegas would like to wear down Montreal over the course of the series, which the Canadiens lead 2-1. Trotz does not believe much in momentum from game to game, but the temperature rises with more feisty on-ice encounters between teams.
âPlayoff series are going to be physical,â Reaves said. âStuff is going to boil over from game to game, from shift to shift, and itâs already started a little bit, and I expect it to keep going.”
Now in the third round for the fourth time in his career, Vegas defenseman Alec Martinez said being this close to the final naturally sparks âemotional games.â That series is aided by teammate Max Pacioretty facing old friends on the Canadiens in a playoff series for the first time since Montreal traded him in 2018.
Even the newcomers to the Islanders-Lightning series have embraced a little healthy distaste for the other team. Zajac hadn’t faced Tampa Bay since January 2020 when he was with New Jersey and was at the center of the scrum at the end of Game 2.
Jon Merrill, who joined the Canadiens at the trade deadline in April, feels the same way about how tensions are developing against the Golden Knights.
âYou become a little bit more familiar with the players â you havenât seen a lot of them all year,” he said. âItâs not that you forget about them but you havenât engaged with them all season long. … As the series goes on I expect it to get more and more intense.â
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Follow AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno
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