By next Wednesday's March 1st NHL trade deadline will goalie Ben Bishop still be a Bolt?

The past Vezina Trophy finalist says he's on the team he wants to be on.  As for the chance of leaving?

"That's obviously out of my hands," said Bishop.  "It's up to Steve (Yzerman) and whatever he wants to do. We'll see. It's part of the business obviously and it's been going on all year so it's not really much of a change and kinda getting used to it I guess."

Factors that complicate things for GM Steve Yzerman are Bishop's cap hit of $5.95 million, the looming expansion draft and his recent flurry of stellar starts.

 Ben Bishops has won five straight starts. His 1.17 goals against average in the month of February 4th is best in the NHL.

"Some of it has to do with getting some good luck compared to earlier in the year," said Bishop.  "The guys are playing well in front of us (defense). It’s not just me. It’s the whole team."

Winning cures all.

"I think when you’re winning obviously the mood is a lot better," said Lightning center Tyler Johnson.

"We’ve been getting points lately and it makes coming to the rink a little more fun in the morning," said Bishop.

"When you win it just makes things more enjoyable so we just want to continue to do this," said Lightning wing Alex Killorn.

Light. Loose. Limber. A vibe that's been missing all year- is back.

"I truly believe we’ve seen this for a while," said Lightning head coach Jon Cooper.  "It’s just when you’re seeing the results now you’re kinda doing the happy dance a little bit."

After burning the Oilers for 8 points, the Triplets (Johnson, Nikita Kucherov and Ondrej Palat) practiced on the same line a day later.

They looked like the trio of old as one of the most dominant lines in hockey during their 2015 Stanley Cup run.  Now it's time to create another memorable run and it could mean relying on that unique relationship.

"I think we just all kinda compliment each other really well," said Johnson.  "In all honesty it’s kinda easy, in a sense. We do our job and we know the other person is going to do there’s."

"I think it’s a chemistry that’s been built over time and it’s really tough for the other team when they have to defend against them," said Killorn.

"It’s fun to watch ‘em," said Bishop.  "It’s definitely nice to have ‘em on your side. You know when they get hot, they can be pretty lethal."