Santa Fe New Mexican

Nashville reaches first Stanley Cup Final

Team entered playoffs with fewest points of any team, lost key players to injury

- By Teresa M. Walker

NASHVILLE, TENN. — Different players just keep stepping up for the Nashville Predators, and now their magical postseason run has an even bigger destinatio­n: the franchise’s first trip to the Stanley Cup Final.

Colton Sissons scored his third goal with 6:00 left, and the Predators eliminated the Anaheim Ducks with a 6-3 win in Game 6 on Monday night in the Western Conference finals.

“In the back of your head, you’ve been thinking about the Finals and then when the buzzer goes off, it’s an amazing feeling,” Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne said.

The Predators, who’ve never won even a division title in their 19-year history, came in with the fewest points of any team in these playoffs. They lost their top center, Ryan Johansen, for the playoffs after Game 4 because of emergency surgery on his left thigh. Captain Mike Fisher has missed two games with an upperbody injury.

“We went through a tremendous amount of adversity the last 72 hours losing two key guys in our lineup,” Nashville defenseman P.K. Subban said. “I mean, I said it before earlier in the playoffs that this team’s got tremendous amount of composure. There is so much confidence in this dressing room what we can accomplish together if we play the right way.”

They’ve swept the West’s No. 1 seed in Chicago, downed St. Louis in six in the second round and now the Pacific Division champs. Peter Laviolette is the fourth coach to take three different teams to the Final, and the first since the playoffs split into conference play in 1994.

Laviolette joked that probably means he’s been fired a lot.

“Our guys know the big picture,” Laviolette said of his Predators. “They understand what it is that we’re trying to do here. And when that time comes, we’ll be ready.”

The Predators will play either defending champion Pittsburgh or Ottawa for the Stanley Cup. Game 1 is Monday. Anaheim lost in the conference finals for the second time in three years.

“Our effort was there and we were a desperate hockey club right from the opening faceoff, and we didn’t quit until they scored the second empty-net goal,” Anaheim coach Randy Carlyle said.

Cam Fowler tied it 3-3 at 8:52 of the third for Anaheim as the Ducks tried to rally for the fifth time this season when trailing by multiple goals.

But Sissons, who scored on the third shot of the game, scored twice in a wild third period to give the Predators a 3-2 lead at 3:00 and then 4-3 three minutes later.

“I don’t think I even dreamt of this moment, scoring a hat trick in the Western Conference clinching game, but I can’t speak enough for just our whole group,” Sissons said. “We’ve been through some challenges together and we stuck together no matter what, just always believed and here we are.”

Austin Watson scored on Nashville’s first shot and had an empty-netter with 1:34 to go. Filip Forsberg also had an empty-net goal.

Rinne made 38 saves to improve to 12-4.

Ondrej Kase scored his second career goal — both in this series — giving Anaheim a chance to tie the NHL record with a fifth rally when trailing by multiple goals. Chris Wagner banked the puck off Rinne’s head for a goal at 5:00 of the third to keep the Ducks close.

But this has been the best postseason ever for Rinne, a three-time Vezina Trophy finalist, a stretch ranking among the NHL’s best. The Ducks, who came in 2-1 when facing eliminatio­n this postseason, peppered Rinne with pucks.

But they had goalie Jonathan Bernier making his first career playoff start after John Gibson was scratched with a hamstring injury.

“This one is going to sting for a while,” Ducks forward Corey Perry said.

 ?? MARK ZALESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ducks goalie Jonathan Bernier reacts to a Predators goal Monday as Predators left wing Frederick Gaudreau (32) and left wing Colin Wilson (33) celebrate during Game 6 of the Western Conference finals in Nashville, Tenn. Nashville won, 6-3, to advance...
MARK ZALESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ducks goalie Jonathan Bernier reacts to a Predators goal Monday as Predators left wing Frederick Gaudreau (32) and left wing Colin Wilson (33) celebrate during Game 6 of the Western Conference finals in Nashville, Tenn. Nashville won, 6-3, to advance...

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