Imperial Valley Press

Preds: Shutting down Pens’ stars not possible every game

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Nashville Predators have shut down the likes of Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane, Vladimir Tarasenko and Ryan Getzlaf this postseason.

They have slowed down Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.

Stopping them completely? Even Nashville defenders Roman Josi, Ryan Ellis, Mattias Ekholm and All-Star P.K. Subban are susceptibl­e to an off night as they find out just how hard it is to keep track of Pittsburgh’s superstar forwards.

“It just seems to be like every second game, they’re talking about how good we play defense and then the other game they talk about how good they are as an offense,” Ekholm said Friday. “And that’s just going to be like (that). It’s world-class players. We can’t shut them down game after game.”

The Predators need another great defensive performanc­e Sunday night in Game 6 or they will watch Pittsburgh celebrate a second straight Stanley Cup championsh­ip on their ice, in front of their frenzied “Smashville” fans, catfish and all. Pittsburgh took a 3-2 lead Thursday night by routing Nashville 6-0 in a game that did more than just put the Pens a win from the title.

Ellis, who plays with Josi as Nashville’s top defensive pair, skated only 10 minutes, 44 seconds during the loss. He lasted just two shifts into the second period before he went to the bench in pain.

Nashville coach Peter Laviolette gave no update on Ellis on Friday. His teammates weren’t sharing any informatio­n either. Whether Laviolette will start goalie Pekka Rinne isn’t a question despite the 34-year-old Finn giving up three goals on nine shots before being pulled after the first period. Not with Rinne 9-1 at home postseason.

The Predators will have center Colton Sissons for Game 6 after the NHL automatica­lly reviewed his cross-check of Penguins defenseman Olli Maatta’s face inside the final minute of Game 6. Sissons was given a match penalty, triggering the review.

Not having Sissons would have been a blow to Nashville’s depth at forward with center Ryan Johansen and left wing Kevin Fiala out injured. Instead, his penalty was just one of 14 given to the Predators with 10 handed out to Pittsburgh for a total of 100 penalty minutes. this

The six goals allowed were a postseason-high for Nashville, which had allowed five goals only twice, with one an empty-netter by Anaheim.

Nashville still is allowing just 2.19 goals per game, but the Predators are being stretched by the NHL’s top scoring team. Crosby, Malkin, Phil Kessel and rookie Jake Guentzel are the top four scorers this postseason. Crosby set up the first goal by Pittsburgh 91 seconds into the game Thursday night.

Ekholm said the Predators tried to answer almost too quickly.

“Then they scored another one, and it just becomes loose,” Ekholm said. “That’s going to happen. We play 20-something games in the playoffs, I don’t think we’ve had one bad game before (Thursday) night so far, and ... it’s going to happen. All we can do is learn from it and go and get better.”

Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan thinks his Penguins have gotten better, calling Game 5 the best they’ve played yet in this series. He also isn’t worried about the Penguins getting overconfid­ent with a chance to win the Stanley Cup on Sunday night.

Patrick Kane, whose stickhandl­ing skills are arguably the best in the world, spends time each summer testing out hockey sticks.

The Chicago Blackhawks superstar puts Bauer’s latest creations in his hands to test how the flexibilit­y, weight and shape suit him and his creative game.

“I love when you get a new batch of sticks that just feel right,” Kane said. “I use a new stick every game. So, there’s no better feeling going out for warmups and knowing the stick feels good, shots are going right where you want them, and stickhandl­ing feels smooth and effortless.”

Hockey sticks have come a long, long way over the years.

Brian Logie, a hockey historian, said hornbeam trees were the source of the first sticks in part because they were abundant in Nova Scotia, Canada, and because the roots grew into the ground at an angle like the blade of stick. They were later made from rock elm and white ash. As stick evolved away from wood, laminates were incorporat­ed and so were fiberglass-reinforced blades.

Thing is, hockey sticks shatter. It happens.

They break despite technologi­cal advances that turn carbon fiber into virtual extensions of a hockey players hands. They are custom made for NHL players, crafted and finessed into a single piece.

Sometimes the breaks happen at the worst time.

“It’s just kind of one of those ‘Oh crap,’ moments,” Pittsburgh Penguins forward Bryan Rust said. “Bad things happen, but you’ve got to just take it and move on.”

During Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final, Pittsburg’s Chris Kunitz had to move on and play without a stick in his hands against Nashville. The winger stood in the way of a shot from Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis and the puck sliced through Kunitz’s stick.

A slash usually is what shatters a stick. One hack in the right — or wrong — place can snap a shaft in two.

Shots, too, can do damage as players do anything, especially in the playoffs, to stop or deflect a puck as Kunitz did. A skater without a stick while the other team has the puck is left relatively defenseles­s, needing to rely on his skates, gloves or body to impede a shot. The blade of a player’s stick can get in the way of a puck inside the blue line and the stick may seem fine. Seconds later, though, he may find out that blocked shot was the beginning of the end for his critical piece of equipment, with bits and pieces soon all over the ice.

Earlier this postseason, that happened Washington Capitals defenseman Kevin Shattenkir­k.

“You get an opportunit­y to take a one-timer from inside the circle as a defenseman, you don’t really get that opportunit­y so you kind of give everything you can, and it’s just an unfortunat­e break,” Shattenkir­k said. “It’s like a bad bounce. I remember when I missed it. I threw my stick down and started skating back because they almost hit a home run for a breakaway. It’s one of those things now with the way sticks are made, they break easier. Guys shoot the pucks harder. They’re stronger and it’s something you have to deal with from time to time.”

Manufactur­ers such as Bauer, CCM and Warrior compete against each other

“I believe this team has a certain maturity to it, and ... it always starts with our leadership,” Sullivan said. “I think they understand how these series go and how, from one game to the next, we have to reset the mindset and just be ready to play that game right in front of us.”

This is the first time Nashville has faced eliminatio­n this postseason after sweeping Chicago, beating St. Louis in six games and then Anaheim in six to claim the Western Conference title.

This may be the Predators’ first time in the Stanley Cup Final, but they staved off eliminatio­n three times last year in playing a full 14 games through two rounds. They won Game 7 to oust Anaheim in the first round after a victory in Game 6 that started a stretch where the Predators now are 13-1 over their past 14 playoff games in Nashville.

Laviolette said his Predators are honest with each other, especially coming off a loss. The coach also doesn’t see any searching for answers because they know exactly what they need to do better, and he expects them to bounce back.

“We need to play a better game,” Laviolette said. “We’ve proven that we can and we have in the past, and there’s a lot of confidence that we will in a couple days.”

 ??  ?? Nashville Predators coach Peter Laviolette and players pause at the bench during the third period in Game 5 of the team's NHL hockey Stanley Cup Final against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday in Pittsburgh. AP PHOTO
Nashville Predators coach Peter Laviolette and players pause at the bench during the third period in Game 5 of the team's NHL hockey Stanley Cup Final against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday in Pittsburgh. AP PHOTO

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