NHL Playoffs: Predators deliver Blackhawks first top seed sweep in opening-round

Blackhawks Predators Hockey

Nashville Predators players celebrate after Roman Josi scored a goal against the Chicago Blackhawks during the second period in Game 4 of a first-round NHL hockey playoff series Thursday, April 20, 2017, in Nashville, Tenn.

(AP)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Pekka Rinne stopped almost every shot he faced. Nashville's top line was outstanding, and Roman Josi and P.K. Subban keyed a solid defensive performance.

The Predators were relentless, all the way to the very end. Way too much for the slumping Chicago Blackhawks.

Roman Josi scored twice, Rinne had 30 saves and Nashville beat Chicago 4-1 on Thursday night to complete a surprising sweep of the Western Conference's top seed.

"It's definitely a great feeling," Josi said. "I thought we played a great series.

That's a great team over there. We've got a lot of respect for them. They've got some world-class players and I thought we played really well in all those four games."

Colton Sissons also scored and Viktor Arvidsson added an empty-net goal as Nashville completed the franchise's first playoff sweep. Led by Rinne's shutouts in the first two games, the Predators limited the high-scoring Blackhawks to just three goals in 13 periods.

Nashville will face the winner of the St. Louis-Minnesota series in the second round. The Blues have a 3-1 lead heading into Game 5 on Saturday in Minnesota.
Chicago became the first No. 1 seed to lose in the opening round since the Los Angeles Kings knocked off the Vancouver Canucks on their way to the Stanley Cup title in 2012. Chicago's second straight first-round exit followed a regular season in which the Blackhawks went 50-23-9 and recorded 109 points, the second-highest total in franchise history.

"Not good enough," Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. "I don't think anybody exceeded their expectations, didn't compete to the level that's necessary.

I take that personally as a coach to find the 'all-out' button and didn't get the job done."

It was the first time a No. 1 seed was swept in the first round since the NHL adopted its current playoff format in 1994. The Blackhawks had the best record in the Campbell Conference and were the Norris Division's No. 1 seed in 1993 when they got swept by St. Louis in the opening round. That also was the last time the Blackhawks had been swept in a playoff series before Nashville's dominant performance.
"It's tough enough to lose a series and fall short," captain Jonathan Toews said. "It's a whole different story to lose four straight and get swept like we did."

It was particularly sweet for Nashville after it was eliminated by Chicago during the Blackhawks' 2010 and 2015 Stanley Cup title runs. The Blackhawks also had gone 4-1 against the Predators during the regular season.

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