Edmonton Journal

PREDS’ STARS ARE BACK ON THE PROWL

Trio combine for eight points after no-show in Game 1, Ken Wiebe writes.

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Nobody said it was going to be easy for the Winnipeg Jets.

After winning the series opener to steal home-ice advantage from the Presidents’ Trophy winners, the Jets couldn’t contain the Nashville Predators’ top line in Game 2.

Held off the scoresheet in Game 1 against the Jets, the Predators trio of Ryan Johansen, Filip Forsberg and Viktor Arvidsson was simply too much to handle in Sunday’s 5-4 doubleover­time loss.

Johansen scored twice, Arvidsson had a goal and two assists and Forsberg finished with three helpers. And after the Jets scored late to force overtime, Predators left-winger Kevin Fiala converted a pass from Kyle Turris at 5:37 of the second extra period to even the series at 1-1.

Game 3 goes Tuesday at Bell MTS Place as the series shifts to Winnipeg for the next two games.

The Predators were determined to do a better job of creating more dangerous scoring chances after being kept mostly to the outside in Game 1 and they didn’t need much time to generate one.

On the opening shift of the contest, Forsberg made a nice play along the boards and found Johansen all alone in the slot as he buried his opportunit­y.

It was the first time in seven games during the playoffs the Jets didn’t score the first goal of the game.

The Predators had a chance to extend the lead, but the Jets were able to kill off a minor penalty to captain Blake Wheeler.

During a four-on-four situation, the Jets evened the score as defenceman Dustin Byfuglien slipped a wrister through the legs of Predators goalie Pekka Rinne, who was back between the pipes after being pulled in Game 1.

The Jets took the lead on an ensuing power play with Mark Scheifele finding the back of the net at 13:16.

That gave the Jets markers that came 29 seconds apart.

The Jets nearly made it a twogoal lead a few moments later as Patrik Laine rattled a shot off the post from the slot.

The Predators scored their first power-play goal of the series to even the score during the second period.

Thanks in part to a perfect jumping screen in front by Arvidsson, P.K. Subban was able to rifle his shot off the post and in, making it 2-2.

The Jets thought they had restored the lead at 13:46 of the second period when Andrew Copp scored on a rebound after a good chance from Byfuglien.

But the goal was waved off immediatel­y as Jets forward Matt Hendricks received an interferen­ce penalty after crosscheck­ing Predators defenceman Matt Irwin. It was the second minor of the game for Hendricks and the fourth offensive-zone penalty of the game for the Jets.

With 1:19 to go in the period, Arvidsson ripped a slapshot past Connor Hellebuyck on the blocker side to put the Predators back on top. Jets defenceman Ben Chiarot pinched at the defensive blue-line, but Forsberg chipped the puck past him to leave Arvidsson with an open lane to the net.

Jets forward Brandon Tanev scored his third goal of the playoffs at 5:11 of the third period to make it 3-3, but that lasted for only 34 seconds as Johansen scored his second of the contest and fourth of the post-season on a nifty individual effort.

Johansen used a great burst of speed to blow past Jets defenceman Toby Enstrom and then roofed his shot in tight to the blocker side of Hellebuyck.

But with the Jets pulling the goalie in favour of an extra attacker, captain Blake Wheeler found Scheifele alone on the back door for his second goal of the game.

The strike with 65 seconds to go in regulation sent the Jets to overtime for the first time in these playoffs.

With his eighth goal of the playoffs, Scheifele moved into sole possession of top spot, one ahead of Washington Capitals left-winger Alex Ovechkin, Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby and Penguins left-winger Jake Guentzel.

“Mark’s progressio­n has been exceptiona­lly consistent,” said Jets head coach Paul Maurice.

“I was actually working in your field a few years back and he got sent back to junior ... and the question on the panel that night was, ‘Is Mark Scheifele a bust?’ Because he didn’t come into the league at 18 and score 30, he got forgotten about a little bit.

“And then he came to the team in his first two or three years and we were truly rebuilding and young, so he wasn’t noticed.”

The Jets dressed the same lineup as in the opener, while the Predators made one change up front, inserting forward Ryan Hartman on the fourth line for Miikka Salomaki.

Hartman, who was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks at the NHL trade deadline for a first-round pick in 2018, had been a healthy scratch in the two previous games after receiving a one-game suspension for his check on Colorado Avalanche forward Carl Soderberg.

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