NHL

Tampa Bay Lightning at Anaheim Ducks

· National Hockey League
Final
1 - 5

Grant's 2 goals lead Anaheim Ducks' 5-1 rout of Tampa Bay

Kevin Shattenkirk and Vinni Lettieri had a goal and an assist apiece, and Nicolas Deslauriers added a short-handed, empty-netter for the Ducks with 7:37 to play. After back-to-back shutout defeats, Anaheim reclaimed sole possession of second place in the Pacific Division by routing the overall NHL co-leaders for only its third win in 12 games.

Ross Colton scored and Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 30 shots for the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Lightning, whose four-game winning streak ended in the teams’ first meeting since Jan. 31, 2020.

“There’s no question the right team won tonight,” Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said.

Anaheim even did it without coach Dallas Eakins, who missed the game after testing positive for COVID-19. He joined All-Star Troy Terry, forward Sonny Milano and key defensemen Cam Fowler and Josh Manson on the COVID shelf for the Ducks.

Ducks assistant coach Mike Stothers, who turns 60 next month, got his first NHL victory while running the Ducks’ bench in the absence of Eakins and fellow assistants Geoff Ward and Joe Piscotty. Todd Marchant, the Ducks’ director of player development, stepped behind the bench temporarily to help out.

“I think everybody really raised their level, and I think it was sprinkled throughout the lineup,” Stothers said. “It starts with Gibby in net, and it worked its way out. I couldn’t be more impressed and more happy and more proud of the guys for the way they rallied and the way they stuck together. It was a really good game against a really good hockey club.”

Tampa Bay's Corey Perry got several standing ovations in his first game in Anaheim since the Ducks bought out his contract in 2019. The 2011 NHL MVP spent his first 14 seasons in Orange County, scoring 372 goals and winning the Stanley Cup in 2007 while becoming a franchise cornerstone alongside longtime linemate Ryan Getzlaf.

“To be here to play in front of these fans again, it was pretty special,” Perry said. “This was home for 14 years, and to come back, obviously it didn’t go the way we planned, it was an emotional day, but now it’s out of the way.”

Grant produced his first multi-goal game since December 2019 in the Ducks’ final home game before Feb. 11. Hampus Lindholm also logged more than 30 minutes on defense for the second straight game in the absence of Fowler and Manson.

“You’ve got guys out of the lineup, and you need people to step up,” Gibson said. “Cam stepped up when Hampus was out, and now it’s vice versa. He’s obviously logging a lot of minutes, and we need people to step up. Tonight we got a lot of contributions from everyone.”

Tampa Bay had won six of seven to pull even with Florida atop the Atlantic Division, but fell behind 4-0 early in the third period at Honda Center. The Lightning went 0 for 7 in their worst power play performance of the season, and Deslauriers scored while Vasilevskiy was on the bench to create a 6-on-4 advantage.

“It’s rare to see our team go (0 for 7) on the power play, but we had some great looks,” Cooper said. “We did everything but put the puck in the net. We gave ourselves a chance, but the hole we dug was too deep.”

The Lightning had a full complement of six defensemen after playing with just four blueliners in Los Angeles on Tuesday due to injuries and salary cap constraints.

Forward Ondrej Palat missed his fourth straight game with a lower-body injury, which meant Perry could play on the top line in his first game at Honda Center since the Ducks bought out the last two years of his contract in the summer of 2019.

Now-departed Ducks general manager Bob Murray paid the biggest buyout in franchise history to cut ties with Perry after he was slow to return to form following major knee surgery. Since the controversial move, the Ducks have been the second lowest-scoring team in the NHL, while Perry has been a steady contributor in Dallas, Montreal and Tampa Bay.

UP NEXT

Lightning: At San Jose on Saturday.

Ducks: At Boston on Monday to open a five-game East Coast road trip.

Regular Season Series

ANA leads series 1-0

Scoring Summary

Goal 1st Period 11:54
Goal 1st Period 19:53
Goal 2nd Period 7:05
Goal 3rd Period 1:27
Goal 3rd Period 5:25
Goal 3rd Period 12:23

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/tb.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originTB https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/ana.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originANA
12 Blocked Shots 14
16 Hits 18
4 Takeaways 7
33 Shots 35
0 Power Play Goals 1
7 Power Play Opportunities 5
0.0 Power Play Percentage 20.0
0 Short Handed Goals 1
0 Shootout Goals 0
27 Faceoffs Won 21
56.3 Faceoff Win Percent 43.8
13 Giveaways 11
7 Total Penalties 8
17 Penalty Minutes 19
Anaheim Ducks Anaheim Ducks Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Troy Terry, RW Day-To-Day Mar 8
John Carlson, D Out Mar 8
Petr Mrazek, G Injured Reserve Feb 18
Tampa Bay Lightning Tampa Bay Lightning Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Gage Goncalves, C Day-To-Day Mar 8
Emil Lilleberg, D Out Mar 7
Nick Paul, LW Injured Reserve Mar 6
Dominic James, C Injured Reserve Mar 5

Game Information

Honda Center

Location: Anaheim, CA
Attendance: 13,148 | Capacity:

2025-26 Atlantic Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Buffalo 39 19 84 6
Tampa Bay 39 19 82 4
Detroit 36 21 79 7
Montreal 34 18 78 10
Boston 35 22 76 6
Ottawa 31 22 71 9
Florida 31 29 65 3
Toronto 27 26 65 11

2025-26 Pacific Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Anaheim 35 25 73 3
Vegas 29 21 72 14
Edmonton 31 25 70 8
Seattle 29 24 67 9
San Jose 30 25 66 6
Los Angeles 25 23 64 14
Calgary 25 30 57 7
Vancouver 19 36 46 8
Full Standings