Predators make Cup a series \u2014 to delight of catfish-throwing fans

Predators make Cup a series \u2014 to delight of catfish-throwing fans

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Pekka Rinne and the Predators are hard to beat on their own ice this postseason, and now they have added their biggest piece of franchise history yet.

A victory in the Stanley Cup final, in front of their raucous, catfish-throwing fans.

The embattled Rinne made 27 saves. Roman Josi and Frederick Gaudreau scored 42 seconds apart in the second period, and the Predators beat the Penguins 5-1 Saturday night to pull within 2-1 in the best-of-seven series.

Credit Rinne for coming through with a stingy performance and improving to 8-1 in Nashville this postseason. The Predators call the 6-foot-5 Finn their backbone, yet critics wanted him benched after looking shaky in the first two games in Pittsburgh giving up eight goals on just 36 shots.

“There was no decision,” Predators coach Peter Laviolette said of changing goalies. “He was terrific. I said that after Game 2. He’s been the backbone for our team. He’s been excellent. His game tonight was rock solid.”

Josi also had two assists. James Neal, Craig Smith and Mattias Ekholm also scored for Nashville as the Predators worked out some frustration against the Pens.

“Like our team has done the whole playoffs against Chicago, St. Louis, Anaheim, we showed really good composure,” said Nashville defenseman P.K. Subban, who had predicted a win in Game 3. “We’re going to take that into the next game.”

Game 4 is Monday night.

“I thought we gave them a couple of freebies where we didn’t force them to have to work for it, and that’s an area we’ve got to be better moving forward,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said. “We’re disappointed we didn’t get the result, but we also understand that this is a series. Our guys, they’ve been through this. They can draw on their experience. We’re not going to let this certainly get us down. We’re going to learn from it, move by it and get ready for the next game.”

Jake Guentzel scored his 13th goal this postseason and fourth of this series for Pittsburgh and now is one off Dino Ciccarelli’s rookie record of 14 in 1981 for Minnesota.

Game 4 is Monday night in Nashville.