Game day quotes: Lightning coach Jon Cooper

Lightning head coach Jon Cooper talks about how his stars might matchup with the Hawks' stars, and jokes that Kane and Toews will likely see a steady diet of Victor Hedman and Anton Stralman.

Tampa Bay Lightning head coach Jon Cooper spoke with the media on Wednesday ahead of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.

Cooper answered questions about matching up against Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane, his sleeping habits, his Oakland Raiders fandom, and more.


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Q: Jon, you’re a lifetime Oakland Raiders fan.
COACH COOPER: You’re supposed to ask those questions in Game 7, not Game 1.

I grew up on the West Coast. I did have a little infatuation for the Raiders when I was much younger. They won all the time. When you’re out there, the limited TV stations we got, you got Seahawk games or Raiders games.

Ken Stabler was my boy, loved him. Fred Biletnikoff. I could go down the list. Lester Hayes. But they were winners. I liked watching teams that won.

Q: Do the matchups change at all when they have Toews and Kane together, guys up front?
COACH COOPER: It’s hard to say. We haven’t played them yet. Last time we played them was in February.

Joel changes lines quite a bit, as well. We’ll just have to see how things go, how things start. I can’t predict what he’s going to do.

I’m fairly certain the lineup he starts with won’t be the lineup he finishes with. He’ll move things around.

Especially teams that haven’t played teams that often, Eastern Conference, Western Conference, you play each other twice a year. I don’t think they get fired up to play the Tampa Bay Lightning the way they get fired up to play the St. Louis Blues in the regular season.

It’s different now. We’ll have to see how it plays out tonight. We’ll get a feel for each other tonight when it starts.

Q: Victor Hedman was saying the night before the games he doesn’t sleep at all. How was your night?
COACH COOPER: We talked about that. He jumps right into video games (laughter).

No, it was good. Same thing I’ve done every night before a game. But it’s hard to explain because we’ve been going through this process for a month and a half now. Just to look at this room at each round, has grown, it’s been pretty cool.

We’re also getting used to it, having everybody around here. I’m human, so you get excited, nervous, whatever the energy is you have before a series. But when the playoffs open, it’s new, it’s fresh, the playoffs are here, everybody is going. You get as far as we are now, it’s unbelievably exciting to be a part of, especially going through what we did yesterday, it was a pretty cool experience.

We’re used to this now a little bit. So you’ve got into routines of what you’re supposed to do the nights before, what we’re supposed to do. Of course, you lean on the things you did the night before you won games as opposed to when you lose. I can’t reveal everything I do.

Q: Game 5, Game 7 in New York, a winning combination, formula. Guys are talking about the same type of style of hockey playing here at home, trying to ‘entertain the crowd’ type of hockey. Do they need to have a mentality like they had in Game 5 and Game 7 to make that happen?
COACH COOPER: It’s hard to explain because we won 32 games at home. We got a little bit maligned for being the team entering the playoffs with the worst road record.

As it turns out, if it wasn’t for our road play, I wouldn’t be sitting here right now.

I think with our team, I don’t know if we take more of a workmanlike approach to these road games. We understand zero-zero is fine for us, even when we’re in the third. We’ll take the chances with our group. You give us a scoring chance, we have a pretty good chance of putting it in the back of the net.

But I think sometimes at home, especially against the Rangers, we fell behind early. We just tried to chase the game. Do we get caught up in our atmosphere, the crowd, everything that’s going on? We might. We’ve been a pretty, I don’t know, free-wheeling group per se when we’ve been at home. We’ve had a lot of success.

When you’re not scoring as much as you’d like, or you’re giving up as many as we were, it gets frustrating, then we press too much.

I think our road game has been much more patient. If we’re going to have success, we’re going to have to do us, or Chicago will light us up.

Q: Keeping on the matchups, what do you do with Kane and Toews if they do play together? Is it a different pairing than you’ve faced in the post-season?
COACH COOPER: Well, that’s a pretty exceptional group, those two guys. But matchup-wise it’s not always what forward group you have against them, it’s your D pair.

I look back at some of these series we’ve played with Brassard’s line and Stepan’s line. Those were two very solid lines. We felt we had three lines we could play against them.



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You look at the Montréal series, Pacioretty was on the ice. We felt we had a couple lines that could play against them.

Detroit the same thing, Zetterberg and Datsyuk.

Every team has good players. You have to challenge yourself to be better. We’re sitting here in the Stanley Cup Final.

I’ve taken on, as well as our team has taken on, sometimes we got to be best on best. You’re not going to pull a rabbit out of your hat and say we have some magic scheme. Just be better than the next guy. That’s what you have to do. You have to challenge yourself.

And Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane are two of the best players this league has seen in a long time. But we feel Steven Stamkos, Tyler Johnson, Ondrej Palat, we go down our list and think, maybe we’re not too bad ourselves. Let’s prove to everybody you can play against these guys.

In saying that, they’ll probably see a high dose of Victor Hedman and Anton Stralman (laughter).

Q: When is the first time you won the Stanley Cup in your mind?
COACH COOPER: Oh, gosh. Those are ones you have to give me beforehand.

I think my parents still have the dryer downstairs where I used to shoot the puck, the dryers that open up. I think my mom still has that dryer, 40 plus years later. That’s where it all started, was in that little basement, Prince George.

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