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Nashville Predators 3, Colorado Avalanche 2: Shake It Off


Filip Forsberg scores another other-worldly goal as the Preds build 3-0 lead, hang on for a victory in Game 4. Read & Watch


Well, that was a roller coaster of emotions.

The Nashville Predators, previously never having scored first in this series, built a 3-0 lead and hung on to win 3-2 over the Colorado Avalanche tonight at Denver’s Pepsi Center.

The first twenty minutes were the best start that the Predators have had to a game this series. Although they had nothing to show for it until a wundergoal by Filip Forsberg, the Predators came out with speed and pace that was not present in the first three games. The Avalanche were very limited to the outside of the net. However, the power play continued to be of ECHL quality as the Predators squandered away a golden 5v3 to start the game.

The second period was better, as the Predators tallied twice. Although Nashville’s lack of discipline has started to rear its ugly head once again, the penalty killers did a pretty good job containing the Avalanche, still keeping them scoreless through two. Ryan Hartman got speared in the _________, and the Predators ended up with more guys in the box. I get that it’s not a head shot, but DoPS should take a look at that.

The third period did not treat the Predators kindly, as they started sans Ryan Johansen, who left the second with an apparent head injury. He returned, but not before the Predators reverted to their play from the first three games and conceded two goals. Nonetheless, the Predators hung on and managed to steal a win from high altitude, giving them the potential to close out the series on home ice Friday night.

Random Observations

And we’re off! Calle Jarnkrok is back! Huzzah!

Early puck to Bernier’s neck, hope he’s alright.

Good, he is.

Delay of game already? Let’s see what the golden boys can do

ANOTHER ONE. Carl Sodoberg high sticks Nick Bonino in the slot and the Predators have an early two man advantage.

I’m sorry but, if you think that firing point shots on a 5v3 is an effective strategy, get your hockey IQ checked. This power play is atrocious, uninspired, and terrible. When is the last time they went back door on the power play? They never throw different looks in. Never. All they do is fire point shots without strategic objectives. If they were low shots, it would make slightly more sense since they could crash a rebound. But all these top-corner high-rising point shots? This is dumb and pathetic. If you’re playing, never shoot high from the point. Hockey 101 right there. Predators get nothing from the 5v3.

Calle Jarnkrok already creating chances, nearly finds Fisher in the slot.

EMELIN STOP HOCKEY-ING, YOU AREN’T REALLY HOCKEY-ING.

FILIP FORSBERG MY WORD.

For my money, the two most dominant players these playoffs have been Filip Forsberg and Artemi Panarin. They both have very similar methods for entering the zone, streaking in and cutting through the left wing.

Much better first period by the golden boys.

Irwin you can’t do that buddy.

How is that delay of game? 5v3 for Colorado.

Why did Fisher dump the puck when halfway into the Colorado zone on the 3v5? Should have just played it back to Rinne in the defensive zone. Better to have possession than move the puck ten feet forwards.

SISSONS OUT OF THE BOX WITH THE FAR POST SNIPE.

Great presence of mind for Sissons to shoot against the grain there.

Ryan Hartman gets speared in the jewels and the Predators end up on the penalty kill?

Hartman with the two-fingered “I’ve got my eyes on you” to Sven Andrighetto, infamous international jewel spearer. Love it. I do this in men’s league all the time. Am I a pest?

CRAIG SMITH DOESN’T SMITH IT! 3-0 guys who don’t spear other dudes in the crotch.

Oh no.

Johansen falls into a hit by Landeskog that would’ve been in the hips if he stayed up. It lands on Joey’s head and he’s down the tunnel.

Bernier is replaced by Hammond to start the third, as Bernier is reportedly out with a lower body injury. Odd but interesting I suppose, I’m not sure on what play Bernier got injured.

Johansen still gone to start the third. I’m not panicking, you’re panicking.

Sike we’re both panicking.

Once again, the power play gets nothing. Color me not surprised.

An underrated element of play, but the Avalanche have done a great job of keeping possession during delayed penalties. Kudos.

Both Sissons and Hartman take penalties. 5v3 for Colorado, two minutes long.

The Avalanche score backdoor on the 5v3. Must be nice. 3-1.

Watson almost scores short handed because of course.

Rinne gets away with a cross check to Jost. Jost gave Rinne a snow shower, but the Predators are really lucky there that there’s no penalty on Rinne. The retaliation normally always gets called.

Is that a “Rinne sucks” chant by Colorado after that? I mean, sure, the play was totally cheap and dirty, but I’m honestly just proud that they’ve learned to chant.

Predators are leaning a little more heavily on Rinne this third period. Keep the pedal on the gas, boys.

Avalanche pressing extremely hard.

Kerfoot scores on a rebound. However, Comeau contacts Rinne’s pad without any push or anything. The puck was on Pekka’s pad, and Comeau pushes it off. Pekka was in his crease. Should be no goal.

Goal. Unbelievable. 3-2 Avalanche.

Johansen is back with 8:30 left! Thank lord.

No call on Sissons getting destroyed well after dumpung the puck. Same play that Sissons was penalized for earlier. All I ask of the referees is to be consistent, and they are failing. Failing both ways.

Is setting a pick now allowed? Smith completely blocked from getting into the offensive zone.

MacKinnon is getting away with a lot of cross-checks behind the play, the choppy kind every defenseman does in the crease. Granted, the Predators have escaped with a fair share of penalties too, but still.

COLIN WILSON HITS THE POST #RegularSeasonColinWilson.

Empty net. Hold onto your Labatts.

PREDS HANG ON. 3-1 LEAD.

Three Stars

Filip Forsberg: 1g, 1a, and another goal of the season. Mattias Ekholm: 2a, solid presence, got under fellow countryman Landeskog’s skin. Pekka Rinne: if the Predators remembered how to hockey the first ten minutes of the third period, he would have had a shutout.

Advanced Stats

Nashville Corsi-for %: 52.22

Nashville Fenwick-for %: 56.72%

Shots: 27 NSH, 23 COL

Nashville High Danger Chances: 11

Colorado High Danger Chances: 6

Especially of note is Nashville’s high danger chances. Through the previous three games, they only had 13 total high danger chances. That number was nearly doubled in one game tonight. If you want evidence that Peter Laviolette got the boys ready to play tonight, look no further than that number.

Tweets of the Night

Does Gatorade Flow go down “real smooth” on the golf course? Asking for some friends. — Gnash (@Gnash00) April 19, 2018

“You have to call the IKEA help line, don’t you?” https://t.co/STl4WKJwLD — Dan (@DanDBradley) April 19, 2018

I nominate this as the new official referee signal for groin spearing. https://t.co/w0uNBDcTdV — Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) April 19, 2018


Predators left wing Filip Forsberg (9) celebrates his goal with defenseman Mattias Ekholm (14) during the first period Wednesday. (Photo: Andrew Nelles / Tennessean.com)

DENVER — Sweep the leg, Flip. It’s time to finish the Colorado Avalanche.

The Predators went through four rounds of this grueling and wonderful thing called the Stanley Cup playoffs last spring, and 22 games of it can make you appreciate the value of efficiency.

These excursions are too draining to play any more than you have to, and the Predators now have the Avs stumbling around the octagon, punch-drunk and one uppercut away from the golf course.

It was Filip Forsberg – that’s “Flip” in Predators locker room-ese – who made the move and scored the goal that set the tone for Wednesday’s 3-2 Game 4 win at Pepsi Center to take a 3-1 series lead. But to Colorado’s credit and Nashville’s discredit, this was a 3-0 laugher that turned into 9 minutes of frantic tension after the Avs scored twice in the third.

More: Preds survive Avs late push, return to Nashville with chance to advance

Again, these things are grueling. Draining. Rarely easy. But Pekka Rinne and the Predators held on, and in a way, that tease might be even tougher for young Colorado to overcome as it looks to stave off elimination Friday night in Game 5 at Bridgestone Arena.

“We have a chance to finish the series at home, so obviously that’s something that’s in the back of your head. We want to take advantage of that and have this opportunity,” said Rinne, who stopped 31 of 33 shots. “But it’s a good team, so we’ve got to play again like this.”

Story continues below

Well, like 40 minutes of it. For the first two-thirds of this game, Colorado looked like one-half of the team that was dragging the Avs around the ice at will. Forsberg capped Game 1 with an astounding through-my-legs-and-your-legs move on Avs defenseman Samuel Girard, but his Wednesday drive might have been better.

Forgive the football analogy but I’m out of karate analogies, and Forsberg looked like a hard-charging defensive end as he ripped through Colorado defenseman Duncan Siemens on his way to the net. Defenseman Patrik Nemeth was like a helpless running back who couldn’t get over for a block as Forsberg curled around to find a gaping goal.

Just as a quarterback must sometimes peel himself off the grass after a sack, Jonathan Bernier could only pick the puck out of his net as “Holy $%&!” rang out several times in the press box far above the ice. Broncos sack master Von Miller, who had a front-row seat Wednesday, must have raised an eyebrow at least.

“A lot of speed, just tried to use my speed wide and used it all around the net,” said Forsberg, who later sent a perfect pass to Colton Sissons for the goal to go up 2-0.

More: Tickets update: Predators vs. Avalanche Game 5 at Bridgestone Arena

“The usual,” Austin Watson said of Forsberg’s latest. “I mean, I know we talk about it all the time, but it seems to be the usual right now. He does some cool stuff out there.”The goal gave Nashville a 1-0 lead with 4:27 left in a first period the Predators completely owned. It silenced a crowd that was cranked to the max Monday as the home team jumped to a 4-0 lead in a Game 3 ambush of Rinne. It was the Predators’ first goal in a first period in this series, and the first time they scored first in this series.

It was Forsberg and the Predators saying this to the Avalanche and their fans: You’ve had your fun.

“Best hockey we’ve played in a long time,” Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis said of the start. “We clinched the playoffs a long time before the season ended and I think we coasted to the playoffs and really coasted through the first three games. That was inspired. We had a really good practice the day before, and that was unbelievable, great effort by the guys. It was effort; that’s all it was. Skating hard, trying to win every battle, and we got rewarded for it.”

More: Josef Newgarden bets James Hinchcliffe Predators go further than Maple Leafs

CLOSE IndyCar driver and Hendersonville native has been a Nashville Predators fan his whole life. Now he just wishes he could make an NHL playoff game.

Nothing’s over until it’s over, but this was reality for all involved. The Predators should wrap this thing up Friday, and the Winnipeg Jets should do the same on the same night at home against Minnesota so this postseason can get to its second-round super series already.

The fine sports fans of Denver can soon turn their attention back to hoping Case Keenum is the answer at quarterback. They have an exciting hockey team here, a team with a future, but it was overmatched Wednesday until the desperate comeback. It misses injured defenseman Girard and Erik Johnson. Bernier left the game after two periods with a lower-body injury, down 3-0, and there was really no reason to play the third.

But that’s when reality found the Predators as well. With Ryan Johansen sitting after taking a faceful of Gabriel Landeskog’s knees late in the second, Nashville just needed to be solid and smart in the final 20 minutes. Instead, Ryan Hartman (charging) and Sissons (tripping) picked up needless penalties on the same play and Landeskog finally solved Rinne with a 5-on-3 putback. The building had life for the first time.

Stay connected: The 6 benefits of a Tennessean digital subscription

Then Alexander Kerfoot put home a rebound – challenged for goaltender interference and it was close – with 8:59 left to set up the wild finish. Johansen returned. Rinne stood tall, and his defense resumed its bounce-back performance to close things out, but Nashville continues to have a bad relationship with the penalty box that it can’t seem to quit.

This will hurt more against better teams. And the Nashville suspension Colorado fans have been screaming for, about different guys since the start of the series, is actually possible now. Hartman, who picked sticks out of his groin area twice, appeared to hit Carl Soderberg’s head on his third-period penalty.

Colorado coach Jared Bednar predicted the league will look at that one, and he may be right. Regardless of that outcome, the Predators still have one chronic weakness to address.

“I would rather we didn’t take as many,” coach Peter Laviolette said of penalties in the understatement of an understated post-game press conference.

“Yeah, we’ve got to stay out of the box,” Watson said. “I don’t know how much more we want to talk about it – I mean, I’ll say it again, we’ve got to be more disciplined.”

Also: Why did the Predators have to be smacked around in Game 3 to find the game that won them the Presidents’ Trophy this season? Maybe Calle Jarnkrok makes that much of a difference. He returned after missing more than a month with a lower-body injury and he immediately mattered. For two periods, the Predators looked every bit like a Stanley Cup favorite. They're still searching for their first excursion of excellence over 60 minutes. But 40 was enough to put this series on one wobbly leg.

Reach Joe Rexrode at jrexrode@tennessean.com and follow him on Twitter @joerexrode.


Predators center Colton Sissons (10) celebrates his goal with defensemen Alexei Emelin (25) and Mattias Ekholm (14) during the second period of Game 4 on Wednesday. (Photo: Andrew Nelles / Tennessean.com)

DENVER — The Predators rarely have veered off course this season, quickly righting themselves when they do.

Floored by the Colorado Avalanche’s Game 3 counterpunch, the Predators brushed themselves off and refocused for Wednesday’s crucial contest.

Let the Predators' 3-2 unexpectedly harrowing victory be a warning to those who consider crossing them, but also a reminder of their mortality.

"We would've loved to win the first one here and win this one, but this (is) what we got," Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis said. "We're up 3-1, and we need another effort like we had in the first two periods."

The Predators, who can eliminate the Avalanche on Friday at Bridgestone Arena, trashed the series narrative regarding their unimpressive starts with a nearly perfect first period. They annexed the Avalanche zone and encircled goaltender Jonathan Bernier, who weathered a barrage of high-percentage attempts before suffering a lower-body injury.

Rexrode: Script flipped: Predators have Avalanche on verge of elimination

Predators forward Filip Forsberg added to his ever-growing collection of jaw-dropping goals, discarding Avalanche defenseman Duncan Siemens on a bulldozing drive to the net.

"I think we obviously have seen how good they've been at the start," Forsberg said. "We just had to match that. We just wanted to come out like we did, and I thought we did a good job of that."

Second-period goals from forwards Colton Sissons and Craig Smith seemingly had the Predators in firm control, but then their nastiest habit resurfaced. Simultaneous penalties to Sissons and forward Ryan Hartman kick-started the Avalanche's push in the third period, the result of a Gabriel Landeskog strike.

"When you're down in a game, you've seen our pushes when we're down, they're going to push as well and try to come back in the game," Predators forward Austin Watson said. "It's not like they're just going to go away."

Wins, regardless of how they're attained, are what matter in the Stanley Cup playoffs. One more puts the Predators one round closer to their objective.

"They're not going to go anywhere," Forsberg said of the Avalanche. "We're (prepared) for that. It's been four really hard-fought games so far, and we're looking forward to another one on Friday."

Reach Adam Vingan at avingan@tennessean.com and on Twitter @AdamVingan.

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