...AND THIS IS WHAT TAMPA IS ALL ABOUT,,,,,,,,IN A CITY THAT HAS HUNDREDS OF OTHER THINGS TO DO BESIDES FOLLOW JUST HOCKEY!!
From Loserville to Titletown: Tampa rejoiced the Tampa Bay Lightning's ascent to NHL champs from hockey doormats.
``They're going to do it!'' screamed Bolts fan Mark Lippstreuer as the final seconds ticked off. ``This is the best thing for Tampa and for hockey ever!''
A minute shy of 11 p.m., the Forum announcer introduced the Stanley Cup, and the arena packed with more than 22,000 yelling fans roared with approval.
``It's electric in here,'' screamed John Shanaughsy in Section 122. ``You have to be inside here to understand it. It's awesome.''
National Hockey League Commissioner Gary Bettman said: ``It's exciting for the fans of Tampa, this city is fast becoming a great hockey town''
They celebrated outside, too. Wall to wall, thousands of cheering Lightning faithful let loose primal screams of joy as the beer flowed - and flowed and flew.
Earlier, pandemonium reigned outside the St. Pete Times Forum when officials decided to close off entry to the outdoor plaza after a fire marshal declared the crowd too big. Police estimates ranged from 25,000 to 30,000 fans clustered around big screens on the east and west sides of the building.
``Let us in! Let us in!'' the angry fans screamed, as mounted police tried to maintain control.
``We can't get in. It's screwed up, and it's the last game,'' said Josh Carroll, 20, of Mulberry.
Another fan, Mike Gilman, 33, of Tampa, said, ``They're trying to sell season tickets, and they won't even let their hard-core fans in here.''
On the plaza under the stars and the warm Florida air, Kathy Shain, 44, of Vero Beach, waved white pompoms lit with blue sparklers. She made the long drive to Tampa to watch Saturday's playoff game, too.
Tim Reynolds, 39, of Tampa, said he was a huge fan, but he had other pressing concerns.
``My biggest problem is there's nowhere to go to the bathroom,'' he said. ``You go out and you can't get back in.''
Nick Kerzman and Nicole Johnson of Tampa made it into the Forum before game time, but headed to Ybor City after what they described as almost being trampled by the crowd.
``It was pretty scary,'' Johnson said, ``but people are excited, so anything can happen. We weren't going to let that stop us from cheering the Bolts on.''
Added Kerzman: ``The Bolts really helped put Tampa on the map as an up-and-coming city. This is really going to help attract young professionals to this area who think Tampa is just a city with beaches.''
Jeanne Roberts drove two hours from Winter Haven because ``the exhilarating, exciting edge of my recliner brought me here. I couldn't watch it at home. I couldn't take it. I had to be here,'' she said.
At Barnacles in Brandon, at least 500 fans packed the restaurant, festooned with 459 televisions, fewer than two dozen of which were tuned to something besides hockey.
One group of friends arrived at 4:30 p.m. hoping to get their usual table, but the boisterous crowd squeezed them out.
Keith Adams, 31, of Mulberry, couldn't believe it. ``Look, it's packed already,'' he blurted. Adams, who works at Tampa International Airport, is a die-hard fan. ``They made me go broke, I've missed so much work,'' he said.
A buddy, Michael Kelley, 34, of Seffner, left before the game started, then reappeared at 8 p.m. with a teddy bear clad in a Lightning jersey. His name: ``Habby-bearlin'' after the Lightning's Russian goalie.
As skies darkened, some fans imagined they saw portents.
James Thorpe, 27 of New Porty Richey said: ``We saw the lightning out there. That's the sign.''
Tampa police Capt. Marion Lewis, who headed security for the game, said three arrests were made by about 11:45 p.m. Not bad for that size crowd, he said.