Waterloo Region Record

Depth, D and Rinne have Preds even

Plenty of unexpected contributi­ons helped Nashville to two home wins and a tied series

- Jonas Siegel

PITTSBURGH — When they left Pittsburgh last week, the Nashville Predators were in a “nasty” 2-0 hole and their chances in the National Hockey League’s Stanley Cup final were looking grim.

That deficit is no more. Depth, defence and the resurgence of Pekka Rinne spurred the Preds to even up the best-of-seven series in Nashville, and now they return to Steeltown with a chance to jump in front of the defending champs when Game 5 rolls around on Thursday night.

“Our guys were pretty confident after Game 2,” head coach Peter Laviolette told reporters in Nashville on Tuesday afternoon. “I know it’s a nasty hole to be in. But we really liked the way we played in Game 1. We thought we played a real competitiv­e game in Game 2. Could have had (different) results in both those games.”

Eight different players scored for the Predators in the two home wins, including a pair from Frederick Gaudreau. The undrafted centre had only nine games of NHL experience before the playoffs, in which he had a single assist.

Gaudreau did score 25 goals for Milwaukee of the American Hockey League during the regular season, but only joined the Predators’ post-season lineup in the Western Conference final when injuries knocked captain Mike Fisher and No. 1 centre Ryan Johansen from the lineup.

“Clearly, the stage is not too big for him,” Fisher said after Gaudreau scored the go-ahead goal and game-winner in Game 4 on Monday night.

The 24-year-old, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, became the second player ever to score his first three career goals in the Stanley Cup final, joining John Harms of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1944.

He’s far from the only unexpected contributo­r for Nashville during these playoffs.

Rookie Pontus Aberg has a pair of goals and five points after mustering only a single goal and assist during 15 regular season games. Colton Sissons, absorbing big minutes in Johansen’s absence, has more goals (six) and points (12) in 20 post-season games than he did in 58 games (eight goals, 10 points) during the regular season.

The vaunted Nashville defence continues to make contributi­ons, with Roman Josi and Mattias Ekholm both scoring in wins at Bridgeston­e Arena, where the Preds boast a 9-1 record in these playoffs.

Their two scariest remaining offensive players only just got in on the action in Game 4. Viktor Arvidsson, who popped a career-best 31 goals in the regular season, scored his third goal of the playoffs Monday to snap a 15-game drought. Filip Forsberg, the most dangerous Predator and someone who also notched 31 this season, also landed only his first of the final in Game 4, and it came into an empty net.

Nineteen different players have scored at least one for the Preds in the playoffs, 14 have at least two, and 11 have at least one game-winning goal.

The Preds also contained the Penguins in the wins, holding them to just two goals while snuffing out six power-play attempts.

Pittsburgh, which scored more goals and peppered more shots than any other team in hockey this season, did generate some of their best looks in Game 4 — a result of their players slipping behind the Nashville defence, according to Laviolette.

Sidney Crosby scored the Penguins only goal that way, beating Rinne on a first-period breakaway.

Crosby was coming off a shotless Game 3, however, and was joined in that regard by Evgeni Malkin, the NHL’s highest-scoring player this spring (26 points). Malkin didn’t have a point in either of the Preds’ two victories nor did winger Phil Kessel.

Nashville successful­ly deployed P.K. Subban and Ekholm primarily against Malkin and the duo of Josi and Ryan Ellis against Crosby.

Maybe the biggest difference to the Predators, though, is goaltendin­g.

Pegged for eight goals on only 36 shots in dropping the first two games, Rinne has rediscover­ed the form which helped the Preds storm through the first three rounds. The 34-year-old stopped 50-of-52 shots in Nashville’s two wins, including breakaway stops of Crosby and Chris Kunitz.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Predators goalie Pekka Rinne stops a shot by Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup final Monday in Nashville. The Predators won the game, 4-1.
MARK HUMPHREY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Predators goalie Pekka Rinne stops a shot by Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup final Monday in Nashville. The Predators won the game, 4-1.

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