NASHVILLE, Tennessee (AP) Ryan Johansen celebrated his game-winning goal with a windmill fist pump and the Nashville Predators finished off the rest of a thrilling third period with the standing-room only crowd on their feet anticipating history.
Yes, the team that plays in a place called ”Smashville” is going someplace the Predators have never been before: The NHL Western Conference final.
Johansen scored 3:15 into the third, and the Predators advanced to the conference finals in their fourth try by beating the St. Louis Blues 3-1 to take the series in six games.
”It’s a big step for the franchise,” Predators defenseman Roman Josi said. ”This is such a great city, such a great hockey city, I think people finally recognize that. Our fans are unbelievable.”
The Predators won their ninth straight playoff game in Nashville going back to last postseason.
Goalie Pekka Rinne made 23 saves and had an assist. Josi had a goal and an assist, and Calle Jarnkrok added an empty-netter with 60 seconds left.
”Right now, it means everything,” Rinne said. ”We haven’t gotten further than this before. Obviously, it’s a great feeling. There’s a lot of work left. After this second round, there are only four teams left. We all know that we have what it takes and everything is in our hands.”
Nashville will play either Anaheim or Edmonton.
Paul Stastny scored for St. Louis, which fell short of a second straight conference final.
The Predators and Blues were tied after the first 40 minutes for a third straight game and fourth overall in this series when Johansen skated up the slot for a pass from Viktor Arvidsson and beat Allen with a backhand.
Goalie Jake Allen kept the Blues close as he had all series, stopping Filip Forsberg on a breakaway with 13:31 left. But Jarnkrok scored with a minute to go to clinch it, amping up Nashville’s celebration.
This was a painful loss for St. Louis. Allen ranked just behind Rinne among stingy goalies this postseason, and the Blues had been the NHL’s best team after coach Mike Yeo replaced Ken Hitchcock on Feb. 1. They had been 12-1-1 on the road, including three wins in Minnesota in taking the first round.
”There were times where we felt like it was winnable, we could’ve come out on the other side,” Yeo said of this series. ”They definitely deserve to be moving on. But we feel it stinks. I hate to say it. But we’ll learn from this and we’ll find a way to get better.”
The Predators got forward Craig Smith back for the first time in this series after he was hurt in Game 3 against Chicago in the first round. And the Blues got back left wing Alexander Steen, who missed Friday night’s 2-1 win with an injury revealed after the loss to be a broken foot aggravated by blocking a shot in Game 4.
St. Louis took the first seven shots and went up 1-0 on Stastny’s goal, a wrister just 2:04 into the game off assists from Vladimir Tarasenko and Jaden Schwartz.
Tarasenko’s shot from the right circle hit off Rinne then Stastny, who knocked the puck in for the goal. The Blues even took the first two penalties of the game, and Nashville couldn’t take advantage of the man advantage with sloppy puck-handling and too many turnovers.
It was the first even-strength goal the Predators had allowed in the first period this postseason. It also was only the third goal St. Louis scored in three games in Nashville, and the Blues wouldn’t beat Rinne again.
”He’s been unbelievable,” Arvidsson said of Rinne.
The Predators needed only 35 seconds into the second to tie it up. Mattias Ekholm found Josi all alone in the right circle for a quick shot past Allen’s glove. That gave Nashville defensemen nine goals this postseason, a franchise record.
Johansen had an assist on Josi’s goal, then scored his first goal of the series and second this postseason with Arvidsson getting his first point against St. Louis on the primary assist.
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