Lightning treat Stanley Cup with respect The Stanley Cup has a storied history and has been all across the world By Tim Povtak The Orlando Sentinel (KRT) TAMPA, Fla. — It has been to the White Mouse, the Kremlin and the Parliament in Canada, to the top of the Empire State Building and the bottom of Mario Lemieux's swim ming pool. Sylvain Lefebrve of Colorado used it for his son's baptism in 1996. Ed Olczyk of the Rangers let Kentucky Derby winner Go for Gin use it as a feedbag in 1994. It has been used as so many beer mugs and champagne glasses, parade marshals and party favors. It has gone bowling, golfing, fishing and cavorting at strip clubs more times than anyone could imagine. It has been religiously worshiped and badly abused. It is what this National Hockey League championship chase is all about — The Stanley Cup, the most recognized, revered, well-traveled trophy in all of sports history. "It's the Holy Grail," said Brad Lukowich of the Tampa Bay Lightning. "It's a symbol of God, basically," agreed teammate Tim Taylor. The Lightning open the best-of seven Stanley Cup Finals on Tuesday night against the Calgary Flames, both looking t® win a title and a chance for every player on their team to hoist the symbol of their sport's supremacy above his head for a memorable lap around the rink. ihis is a USA vs. Canada series, two smaller-market teams that almost seem out of place in their sport's showcase event. Yet their single-pur posed quest to lift that Cup overpow ers any other subplot imaginable. "When you lift that Cup, it sud denly means your life is perfect," said Calgary veteran Martin Geli nas, one of a handful of players in this series to have played on a Stan ley Cup championship team. "It's a feeling that is impossible to de scribe with words." It can bring tears to the eyes of hard ened men, like Lukowich's father when he saw his son carrying it after Dallas won the Cup in 1999. It can cause flashbacks, like it did with Taylor when he helped win it for Detroit in 1997, skating his lap and thinking back to his childhood dreams. It can cause regret for people like Gelinas, who wishes now he had shared it more with those he loved when he helped win it in Edmonton 14 years ago. More than any tangible object in professional sports, the Stanley Cup produces a sense of awe among fans, and a died-and-gone-to-heav en feeling among athletes who have won it. Hockey is a passionate, hardened sport with a passionate, hardened, rough-and-tumble symbol. "The Cup is what it's all about, * said Chris Simon, who won it in 1996 with Colorado. "It just provides a feeling of great joy that everyone who touches it can share. When you win it, you want to share it." The Stanley Cup doesn't hide in a trophy case in hockey's hall of fame, or behind protective glass in the winner's rink. It's a people's tro phy, touched by a thousand hands every year, photographed around the world. It has dents and marks and plenty of imperfections. It's a blue-collar award in a blue-collar sport, standing the test of time. Although a replica often sits per fectly for viewing in the hall of fame, the actual Cup travels almost 300 days a year. Each player on the win ning team of this series will have it for 24 hours, to do as he pleases, wherever he pleases. It has been showered with and slept with, locked in the trunk of a car, thrown in a snowdrift and acci dentally abandoned on the side of a road. It's been stolen and recovered several times, dropped into more than one swimming pool, hoisted by more than one inebriated player. Yet often now, it is used in a more conservative manner. Since 1995, it has traveled with a bodyguard, some one who serves as both a drop-off and pick-up man, cutting down on the abuses it once endured. It does not fly coach. It flies in its own first class seat, next to its keeper. (c) 2004, the Orlando Sentinel (Fla.). Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. SCHEDULE 21-August Get Ready for Summer. Plan Your Classes Now! The UO Summer Session Catalog with Schedule of Classes is available on campus. It’s free. Summer session starts June 21. Group-satisfying and elective courses, seminars, and workshops begin throughout the summer. Check Our Website! UO Summer Session Catalog is here! Book Your Summer in Oregon The University of Oregon is an equal-opportunity, affirmative-action institution cor http://uosummer.uoregon.edii Read it online, or pick up a free copy today in the Summer Session office, 333 Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore Telephone (541) 346-3475 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON imitted to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. DOWNED continued from page 7 earlier pairing had run long. That, Panova said, may have come into play in her loss. "1 waited a long time before my match and I think that kind of mentally exhausted me," Panova said. Head coach Nils Schyllander said Panova made just a few mistakes. "At this level and as a collegiate ath lete just a few mistakes will get you," Schyllander said The loss leaves the junior from Moscow tied with Krissy Barger on top of the Oregon all-time singles victories list with 72. The loss also denies Panova the chance to break her own single-sea son record in victories. Panova's 32 wins ties her record-breaking total from last season. Panova's teammate, Dominika Dieskova, also made an early exit from the tournament, losing to Stanford's Theresa Logar, 6-2,6-1. Dieskova, the first freshman ever to make it to the NCAA tournament for Oregon, was up 2-1 in the first set and had a break point, but couldn't convert on the opportunity. Logar took control from there, los ing only two more games the rest of the match. "In the first set I had some chances, but she played solid tennis and didn't make any mistakes," Dieskova said. Schyllander believes the familiarity of the courts and her recent play helped keep Logar fresh. Logar helped Stanford win the NCAA team tournament — also held in Athens — on Sunday. "She's been playing on these courts for the last three days, so I think that definitely helped," Schyllander said. Kost will head to NCAAs Oregon's Manuel Kost's hopes for a second consecutive trip came true Monday. It was announced he will participate in the NCAA Individual Tournament, beginning Wednesday. Kost, ranked 66th in the country, was announced as an alternate two weeks ago, but was named part of the 64-man field on Monday. The tournament pairings will be an nounced later today and will determine when and whom Kost and teammate Sven Swinnen will play on Wednesday. Clayton Jones is a freelance reporter for the Emerald. SPORTS BRIEF Courtney Nagle wins Arthur Ashe Award Oregon senior Courtney Nagle was awarded the 2004 Arthur Ashe Award for Leadership and Sportsmanship from the Intercollegiate Tennis Asso ciation on Sunday. The award is handed to the player who exhibits outstanding sportsman ship and leadership along with aca demic, extracurricular and tennis achievements. Nagle helped lead the Ducks to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2000 this past season. She de feated 64th-ranked Erin Hoe in the last match of her career in Oregon's near upset of Washington in the sec ond round of the NCAA Tournament. Nagle finished her Oregon career third all-time on the victories list and ended with a 65-36 record. She was named an All-American her junior year after receiving a bid to the NCAA Individual Championships after post ing a 19-16 singles record. "I am so proud of Courtney," Ore gon head coach Nils Schyllander said. "She was the cornerstone of our team and has set a tremendous example of what we are looking for in an Oregon athlete." Nagle will receive the award in August during a special ceremony at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, N.Y. — Clayton Jones