Medicine Hat News

Maurice preaches calm

But everyone knows Nashville will be crazy in Game 7

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Anticipati­on, excitement and a fair amount of nerves are to be expected ahead of a Game 7.

That’s the easy part. Or least the predictabl­e part.

But for Winnipeg Jets head coach Paul Maurice, something else lingers ahead of two opponents preparing to decide which will move on and which will head home.

“There’s absolutely a different feel,” he said. “It’s the final game for one team.

“There’s definitely a calmness to it. There’s a finality coming. It brings out the best.”

After a back-and-forth slugfest of a second-round series with the Nashville Predators where neither club has imposed its will for longer than a period or two, the Jets are looking to get back to their best, or close to it, on the road in Game 7 at Bridgeston­e Arena on Thursday night.

“Simplicity,” Maurice added when asked what will finally decide the razor-thin margin. “The team that can play as close to their game as possible — their identity game — wins.”

That winner will take on the expansion Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference final, while the loser of the matchup featuring the NHL’s No. 1 and No. 2 teams this season will be left to pick up the pieces.

Winnipeg had an opportunit­y to clinch in Monday’s Game 6 only to fall 4-0 on home ice and send things back to Nashville all tied up.

The pressure has now swung back to the veteran Predators, who won the Presidents’ Trophy with 117 points and made last spring’s Stanley Cup final. The Jets were just three points back in the overall standings.

Both sides have failed to win consecutiv­e games, and the two powerful home teams during the regular schedule own a middling 2-4 record through six second-round games.

The speedy, youthful Jets have looked unstoppabl­e at times only to be brought back to earth by the battle-tested Predators each time they’ve nosed in front.

Winnipeg will need one more push to get to the city’s first conference final.

“We’ve been prepared well and done a good job of fixing the things we have to fix in a loss and throwing it away and starting fresh,” said centre Paul Stastny, the Jets’ most experience­d Game 7 participan­t with three under his belt. “No one likes to lose, no one likes to be around guys when you’re losing.

“We’ve done a good job of not getting too high or too low after games and always focusing on the next one.”

Nashville comes in with far more pedigree in Game 7s after playing two in the 2016 playoffs. This will be the first Game 7 for the Jets/Atlanta Thrashers.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/MARK HUMPHREY ?? Winnipeg Jets head coach Paul Maurice watches the third period in Game 1 of an NHL playoff series against the Nashville Predators, April 27 in Nashville, Tenn. Game 7 goes tonight.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/MARK HUMPHREY Winnipeg Jets head coach Paul Maurice watches the third period in Game 1 of an NHL playoff series against the Nashville Predators, April 27 in Nashville, Tenn. Game 7 goes tonight.

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