Steven Stamkos on move: 'I never
thought this day would come'
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[July 16, 2024]
Steven Stamkos bid an emotional farewell to the Tampa Bay
community on Monday, penning an article for The Players' Tribune
that recounted going from the No. 1 draft pick to team captain to
two-time Stanley Cup champion.
"How do you say goodbye to a place like that? To a city that
welcomed you as an 18-year-old kid, to the only NHL team you've ever
known, to a fan base that's been family? I don't really know, to be
honest," he wrote.
Stamkos, 34, signed a four-year, $32 million contract in free agency
with the Nashville Predators on July 1 after he and Lightning
officials weren't able to come to terms on a new contract.
"I never thought I'd have to do one of these. It doesn't quite feel
real that I won't be a Bolt this fall," he wrote in his essay. "But
over the past few weeks, I've had this really deep sense of how
lucky I was to be one for 16 years."
Stamkos recalled his first day in Tampa, a kid from Ontario taken
with the No. 1 overall pick in 2008.
"When I got down to Tampa ... I was nervous. The very first time I
walked into the rink it was for a press conference," he said. "I
went in through the security entrance where we come in before
practices, and I couldn't believe it: There were hundreds of
employees lined up all the way down the hall, clapping for me as I
walked by. I'll always remember how that made me feel, how welcome I
felt. That's really stuck with me. I felt connected to the
organization right away. And that connection never left me.
"The bond that the Lightning have with Tampa is a really special
thing."
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The bond was strengthened when the Lightning won
two Stanley Cup titles in 282 days, winning in the "bubble" in the
2019-20 pandemic season and again the following year.
"It was such an amazing time in the city those few years. The Bucs
were winning, the Rays were great. ‘Champa Bay' was alive. The boat
parades, the crowds, the celebrations. That's what it's all about. "
Stamkos said he takes nothing but great memories from his time in
Tampa, where he played 1,082 games and tallied 1,137 points (555
goals, 582 assists).
"These past few weeks have been bittersweet. I never thought this
day would come," Stamkos wrote. "I did everything I felt I could do
to make it work, but sometimes things just happen. It didn't work.
And I'd be lying if I said it wasn't heartbreaking. But my family
and I, we're human, you know? Tampa is home. It's where our three
kids were born ... it's where our memories are. It's always going to
mean so much to us."
--Field Level Media
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