"I watched the last few minutes from the concourse with an usher, a wonderful woman who held my hand with me," said Betsy Rust, Bryan's mother. "I was so proud of how he had played that game, but I knew it would be only important if they won."
Rust's goals were the difference in a 2-1 win, and he scored the first goal of the Stanley Cup Final against the San Jose Sharks, giving him four in three games.
"My brother and I joke about it all the time," Matt said. "We played an endless amount of 'NHL' on Xbox, and just the fact that we're driving around today with the Stanley Cup in a golf cart, it's outrageous. It's extra special for me obviously, just because I was close to it and I didn't quite make it. So you know, I don't miss a game. Every time he's on the ice, I'm there with him."
The Rust family holds an annual golf competition called the "Rust Family Open." This year, they were scheduled to go to Whistling Straits in Sheboygan, Wis., home of the 2015 PGA Championship and the 2020 Ryder Cup. Problem was, they were scheduled to go in mid-June.
"It was OK to cancel that trip," Bryan said with a smile.
The Rusts ended up playing the Open a couple of weeks ago near the family place in Oscoda in northern Michigan, and when they played Saturday at Plum Hollow, where they have been members for years, they had a special guest, hosted a celebration, and took donations for ALS research in honor of Peter Viviano, Bryan's maternal grandfather, who died before Bryan was born.
"We can believe that it really happened," Steve Rust, Bryan's father, said of winning the Cup. "Would anybody have predicted it a year ago? Probably not. Certainly not at the beginning of the season. But somehow he figured it out, as he describes it to us. He figured it out, and everything had gone pretty well. Obviously the Stanley Cup is incredible."