The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Penguins outplayed, find way to win

Pittsburgh outshot 26-12 but captures ‘bizarre’ opener 5-3.

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The winning team went nearly two full periods without a shot. The hottest goaltender in the playoffs was only tested 11 times in 58 minutes — and lost.

No wonder Penguins coach Mike Sullivan described his team’s 5-3 victory over Nashville in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final as “bizarre.”

And that doesn’t even include the catfish tossed onto the ice by a Predators fan at PPG Paints Arena in the middle of a second period. The fish that splatted on the Nashville blue line earned the thrower three misdemeano­r charges and also came as close to Predators goaltender Pekka Rinne as anything the Penguins managed during 20 minutes in which the highest-scoring team in the league couldn’t even muster a single shot.

“It’s not always pretty,” Sullivan said Tuesday. “We don’t get points for style. But what I love about our team is that we find ways to win, we compete.”

True, though for the majority of Game 1, the competitio­n was pretty one-sided. The Predators controlled the pace and the puck, just not the scoreboard. It left the guys from “Smashville” in a new position for the first time since they began their mad dash to the final a month ago: chaser instead of chasee as Game 2 looms.

“Now we face a little adversity,” said defenseman Ryan Ellis, who scored the first Stanley Cup Final goal in team history. “We see what kind of group and character we have to bounce back.”

The Predators haven’t dropped consecutiv­e games in the postseason and their four previous losses were pretty easy to explain. What happened on Monday night was not. The only area where Nashville wasn’t markedly better than the defending Stanley Cup champions is the only one that really matters.

“Everything was there that we liked but the result,” said Ellis, who described the Predators as more disappoint­ed than mad. You can probably add baffled to the list. Nashville became the first team since the NHL began tracking the stat in 1957 to hold a team without a shot for an entire period during the Stanley Cup Final. The gulf actually stretched 37 minutes in all, which sounds like a perfect way to win.

Except the streak was bookended by goals. The first, a ricochet off Nashville defenseman Mattias Ekholm, gave the Penguins a 3-0 lead with 17 seconds left in the first period. The second, a sniper shot by Penguins rookie Jake Guentzel exactly 37 minutes later, put Pittsburgh back in front to stay at 4-3.

Sullivan calls it the ability to “win games different ways,” but what happened in Game 1 seems borderline impossible.

“We know that’s not necessaril­y the way you want to play the game every night,” Sidney Crosby said.

Senators: Center Derick Brassard needs surgery for a torn labrum in his right shoulder, GM Pierre Dorion said. Expected recovery time is four to five months.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Predators goaltender Pekka Rinne went 37 minutes of playing time without facing a shot on net but allowed the go-ahead goal late in Monday night’s Game 1.
GETTY IMAGES Predators goaltender Pekka Rinne went 37 minutes of playing time without facing a shot on net but allowed the go-ahead goal late in Monday night’s Game 1.

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