Nathan MacKinnon scored once and assisted on the tiebreaking goal, helping the Colorado Avalanche hoist the Stanley Cup in Tampa, Florida, on Sunday after a 2-1 win over the defending champion Lighting.

Colorado took the best-of-seven series in six games, winning Games 1 and 4 in overtime and Game 2 in a 7-0 blowout.

The Avs had fallen short of wrapping up the championship on home ice Friday in Game 5 before they prevailed at Amalie Arena.

After Tampa star Steven Stamkos gave his team an early 1-0 lead, MacKinnon equalized early in the second period before he fed Artturi Lehkonen for the game winner midway through the second period. 

It’s the third Stanley Cup won by the Colorado franchise with roots going back to its 1972 formation as the Quebec Nordiques of the old World Hockey Association. The Avalanche won it all in 1996, their first season in Denver, and then again in 2001.

Image: 2022 NHL Stanley Cup Final - Game Six
Nathan MacKinnon, No. 29, and his Colorado Avalanche teammates celebrate his goal in the second period of Game Six of the Stanley Cup Final against the Tampa Bay Lightning in Tampa, Fla., on Sunday.Julio Aguilar / Getty Images

Colorado’s win Sunday kept Tampa from capturing its third straight title, a feat last accomplished by the New York Islanders, who had a four-year run from 1980 to 1983.

Winning three consecutive titles in any of North America’s four major pro sports is a rarity.

Baseball’s New York Yankees (1998-2000) and basketball’s Los Angeles Lakers (2000-02) were the last to accomplish the feat in their sports, and no football team has ever won three consecutive Super Bowls.

The Green Bay Packers won the first two Super Bowls, on Jan. 15, 1967, and Jan. 14, 1968, and the final NFL title of the pre-Super Bowl era.

The NHL season’s end also completed the 28th consecutive campaign in which a Canadian franchise failed to lift Lord Stanley’s famed chalice as champions of the North American league dominated by Canadian players.

The last team north of the border to win it all was the Montreal Canadiens in 1993. Seven of the league’s 32 teams are based in Canada, in theory giving the Great White North a 1-in-5 shot of fielding a Stanley Cup-winning team.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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