If it was pouring meteorologically in Tampa Bay on Saturday, it was a Lightning storm in the first period at Amalie Arena in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Final.
The Tampa Bay Lightning had an attack-by-committee plan to open the game and they were all over the Washington Capitals, leading to a 2-0 lead before 10 minutes expired en route to a 3-2 win to take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-7 series.
RELATED: [Complete Lightning vs. Capitals series coverage]
Game 6 is at Capital One Arena on Monday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN1, TVAS), but before I get there and analyze what the Capitals have to do to force a Game 7, let's go over what went so right for the Lightning in Game 5.
The most important thing I've seen from the Lightning is that they spend very little time in their defensive zone because of how fast they play. This is what the Pittsburgh Penguins also did so well to win the Stanley Cup in 2016 and 2017.
It's two passes and they're out. The Lightning have support everywhere and they're always on the move. They're standing still for the support in a scrum, in a swarm corner defense. There's a great picture of Steven Stamkos standing right at the face-off dot, his head is spinning back and forth it looks like a scene out of "The Exorcist," but he gets it and it's moved.
It's transition everywhere. Everything is moved out. It's all with speed. It goes back to Scotty Bowman when he used to say, "When we dump it in, it's not to dump it in and turn it over, it's to dump it in and get the puck back." That's the philosophy they've got going and they have the players willing to do it.
With their speed and support, they're going to get it. They're defending. You see their players inside the pocket of the Capitals as opposed to peeling back and respecting their speed.
Just look at that first goal. A lot of stick play. Everybody pokes, pokes, pokes, and the next thing you know they're alone in front of the net and it's a goal for Cedric Paquette 19 seconds into the game.