The Penguins were led by captain
Mario Lemieux, coach
Scotty Bowman, and goaltender
Tom Barrasso. The Blackhawks were led by captain
Dirk Graham, head coach
Mike Keenan and goaltender
Ed Belfour. They also made history in having the first Russian-born player to have a chance to get their name on the Stanley Cup in
Igor Kravchuk. Mario Lemieux won the
Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP for the second consecutive year, becoming only the second player in NHL history to do so:
Bernie Parent had won it when the
Philadelphia Flyers won the Cup in the consecutive years of and .
Game one In the opening game of the 1992 Stanley Cup Final, the Pittsburgh Penguins overcame deficits of 3–0 in the first period and 4–1 halfway through the second period to win by a score of 5–4. This was the first victory from a three-goal deficit in the Final since
1944 Six minutes into the game, the Blackhawks' forecheck drew a penalty against Pittsburgh. Right off the subsequent face-off,
Chris Chelios scored the first goal of the Stanley Cup Final on a wrist shot. After surviving a Pittsburgh powerplay, the Blackhawks' aggressive offensive-zone strategy would lead to two more Blackhawks goals within a 26-second window. First,
Michel Goulet converted a takeaway on the boards in the Penguins' zone to make it 2–0, then
Dirk Graham scored on a rebound with the shot by Chelios. Pittsburgh got on the board after
Igor Kravchuk got penalized for holding and
Phil Bourque scored on a wraparound after Blackhawks goalkeeper
Ed Belfour lost his stick. Chicago subsequently extended their lead to 4–1 via a two-on-one breakaway from
Steve Larmer to
Brent Sutter, who beat
Tom Barrasso under his left leg. Just as their powerplay from Chicago's too-many-men penalty expired,
Rick Tocchet deflected a shot from
Paul Stanton into the Chicago net. Then, on the Penguins' next rush, Kevin Stevens drew several Blackhawks on him, which gave
Mario Lemieux room to bank the puck off the
Ed Belfour's leg, decreasing the deficit to 4–3. After fifteen minutes in the third, the Penguins would equalize the score. Aided by a pick on a Pittsburgh defender by
Shawn McEachern,
Jaromir Jagr deked around three Blackhawks, charging into the crease starting from the boards, and beat Belfour on a backhand shot to tie the game at 4–4 with 4:55 remaining in the third period. After both Mike Hudson for the Blackhawks and Lemieux for the Penguins drew penalties while charging the offensive zone against two opposing defenders, almost exactly two minutes apart, the game seemed poised to go into overtime with Pittsburgh playing with a one-man advantage. However, on an offensive-zone face-off to start the Pittsburgh powerplay, Mario Lemieux charged the Blackhawks' net from the weak side and put a rebound off a shot by
Larry Murphy past Belfour. Pittsburgh's first lead of the game thus came with thirteen seconds remaining in the game. The Penguins held off the Blackhawks to win game one, 5–4.
Game two In game two, nearly ten minutes into the game,
Bob Errey scored the first goal for Pittsburgh shorthanded. In the second period, after denying Lemieux his scoring chance,
Bryan Marchment trailed the subsequent play into the Pittsburgh zone and then won a physical battle against
Larry Murphy. On a seemingly broken play he put the puck past
Tom Barrasso into the Pittsburgh goal to tie the game at 1–1. However, Marchment was called for an elbow check and Mario Lemieux scored on a one timer set up by Rick Tocchet, 43 seconds into the ensuing powerplay. Two-and-a-half minutes later, Brian Marchment, who had been the catalyst for Chicago's lone goal, was beaten on the boards by Rick Tocchet. Tocchet again fed Lemieux in the slot, and another one timer extended the Pittsburgh lead to 3–1. The Penguins then limited the Blackhawks shots to four in the third period to take Game 2 3–1.
Game three In game three, the Blackhawks put up more offensive pressure on the Penguins. Pittsburgh instead shut out the Blackhawks, with Tom Barrasso stopping all 27 shots in the three periods. The lone goal came from
Kevin Stevens putting his team into a 3–0 series lead.
Game four After the series saw a total of just one goal over the course of 86 minutes of hockey spanning from the second period of game two to the early moments of game four, the two teams erupted for an eleven-goal outburst in game four, which was the first NHL game played in the month of June. There were four goals scored in the first seven minutes of the game, and five in the first eleven, with the first period ending with a score of 3–3. The lasting image of the opening stanza was perhaps the sea of hats on the ice after Blackhawks captain
Dirk Graham recorded a
hat trick by accounting for all three of Chicago's goals. Pittsburgh's goals were scored by
Jaromir Jagr after
Ed Belfour turned over the puck behind his goal; by
Kevin Stevens on a one-handed backhand
wrist shot that was deemed "stoppable" by TV analyst
Bill Clement (and sparked the change in goal); and by
Mario Lemieux on a rebound off a shot from
Larry Murphy, which had been set up by Lemieux. Graham scored his hat trick to answer each of these I goals on a rebound off his own backhand shot and two one-timers after he was left alone at the Pittsburgh crease in both instances. There were two goals scored in the second period – one on each side – to make the score 4–4. Pittsburgh's tally came just 58 seconds into the period, when
Rick Tocchet was left alone after the Blackhawks neglected to defend the area near the crease. With less than five minutes to go in the second period, the Blackhawks immediately scored a goal to tie the game for the fourth time, when
Jeremy Roenick deflected a shot by
Brian Noonan off Murphy's leg. The proverbial floodgates would, however, open almost exactly five minutes into the final period, when the Penguins scored twice in just over three minutes. At first, a shoulder check by Mario Lemieux against
Chris Chelios behind the Chicago goal set up a wrist shot by Larry Murphy through traffic, which went past Hasek for a 5–4 Pittsburgh lead. Then
Ron Francis converted a slapshot in a two-on-one situation to give Pittsburgh its first two-goal lead of the game. Chicago would come closer once more, when Jeremy Roenick scored at the 11:18 mark to make it 6–5 Pittsburgh after Larry Murphy tripped behind his own goal, just over three minutes after the second Pittsburgh goal of the period. Just a minute later, Chris Chelios hit the goal post, and the Roenick-Chelios pair would also sustain pressure in the final minute of the game with Chicago playing with an empty net. Overall however, Pittsburgh still controlled most stretches of these final eight minutes, as they didn't have trouble getting out of their zone. Pittsburgh finished the game 6–5 earning their second Stanley Cup. Mario Lemieux was given the
Conn Smythe Trophy as the MVP of the playoffs. ==Broadcasting==