Predators complete stunning sweep of Blackhawks
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[April 21, 2017]
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- By not
planning on a sweep, the Nashville Predators accomplished what few
thought was possible.
Roman Josi scored twice, Colton Sissons and Viktor Arvidsson each
chipped in a goal and an assist, and Pekka Rinne capped an
otherworldly series with 30 saves Thursday night as Nashville
finished off its first four-game sweep in franchise history with a
4-1 decision over the Chicago Blackhawks.
The Western Conference's eighth seed outplayed No. 1 seed Chicago,
using depth and speed to its advantage while getting a .976 save
percentage from Rinne. The result sends the Predators to the
conference semifinals against Minnesota or St. Louis next week.
"They're a great hockey team, but everyone showed up to play,"
Nashville captain Mike Fisher said. "We're only part of the way
there."
The Predators became the first No. 8 seed to sweep a No. 1 seed
since the NHL started utilizing a conference-based 1 vs. 8 format in
the first round in 1994, according to STATS, LLC. No NBA team has
managed the feat either, dating back to the start of 16-team
playoffs in 1984.
Billed as a Stanley Cup contender when the season started six months
ago, the Predators spent most of the regular season redefining
inconsistency, mixing powerful performances with stretches where
they did just enough to lose games.
A late-season surge pushed Nashville over the finish line, but a
loss in the regular-season finale at Winnipeg set up the Predators
with what looked like a poor matchup on paper. The Blackhawks beat
the Predators four of five times en route to a 50-win regular
season.
But with the exception of the last two periods of Game 1, which
Rinne stole, and short stretches in Game 3 and Game 4, Nashville was
clearly a better team. All four lines scored in the series, and the
Predators' defense came up big, no bigger than in the clincher.
"I think we'll command a little bit more respect around the league,"
Sissons said. "We just have to stay hungry and stay humble."
Sissons epitomized the way the Predators subdued Chicago. One of
their depth forwards, Sissons scored in Game 2 and victimized the
Blackhawks with a timely goal just when they were putting serious
pressure on Rinne.
Sissons, taking a pass from Arvidsson in the high slot, whipped a
wrister off the crossbar, then turned back down the ice. But goalie
Corey Crawford gifted Sissons his second goal of the series when he
swept the puck into the net while trying to locate it at 8:52,
giving Nashville a 2-0 lead.
"When we needed a timely goal, we got it," Predators coach Peter
Laviolette said. "When we needed a timely save, Pekka got it. I
liked the way we played against Chicago during the regular season,
but we didn't get the wins. We just tried to put together a good
game plan, tried to win a game and go on from there."
Josi snapped a scoreless tie at 9:41 of the second period, capping a
long stretch of play in the Chicago defensive zone by ripping a
slapper from the right wall through Crawford's legs for his first
goal of the series.
[to top of second column] |
Predators left wing Viktor Arvidsson (38) watches a goal by center
Colton Sissons (not pictured) past Chicago Blackhawks goalie Corey
Crawford (50) during the third period in game four of the first
round of the 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bridgestone Arena.
Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports
Josi's second goal came 89 seconds after Sissons'
fluky goal, a beautiful marker on which Sissons teed him up with a
pretty feed at the left goalpost. Josi tapped it in for a 3-0 lead
that send the standing-room only crowd of 17,326 into a frenzy.
"We've always had confidence in this locker room," Josi said.
"They're a great team, but this is so much fun to beat them."
Jonathan Toews notched a power play-marker for Chicago at 14:42, but
Arvidsson applied the finishing blow with an empty-netter at 18:12
as the crowd chanted "Sweep."
"We all thought it was going to go a different way," Blackhawks
right winger Patrick Kane said. "Disappointed ... shocked."
Crawford made 22 saves in the loss that left coach Joel Quenneville
questioning everything from the buttons he could have pushed to his
team's compete level.
"Major disappointment," Quenneville said. "Not good enough."
As for the Predators, they now have an unexpected week or more off
before they move on to the second round for the second straight
season.
"It was good to win a series and we beat a good team," Laviolette
said. "No disrespect to Chicago, but I promise you the next round
will be harder. There are eight teams left and every team is a great
team."
NOTES: Chicago opted to go with seven defensemen Thursday night,
utilizing Michal Kempny for the first time in the series. ...
Nashville LW Colin Wilson (lower-body injury) and RW Craig Smith
were scratched. Smith left Game 3 in overtime with an injury and was
replaced by PA Parenteau for Game 4. ... The Blackhawks' scratches
were LW Andrew Desjardins, LW Tomas Jurco, RW Jordin Tootoo, D
Michal Roszival, G Jeff Glass, RW Kyle Baun, LW John Hayden, D
Gustav Forsling, C Vinnie Hinostroza, LW Tyler Motte and D Erik
Gustafsson. ... The Predators also scratched D Anthony Bitetto, D
Brad Hunt, RW Miikka Salomaki, LW Cody McLeod and LW Vernon Fiddler. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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