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In Game 6, Penguins hope to draw on experience to help them become champions

By Jeremy Tepper for The 4 min read
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Associated Press

Sidney Crosby puts a shot off the left post behind Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne after being held by the Predators’ Ryan Ellis during the first period of Game 5 on Thursday, in Pittsburgh. The penalty set up the Penguins first power play and goal. The Penguins won, 6-0. Crosby will look to lead the Penguins to their 5th Stanley Cup tonight in Nashville.

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Evgeni Malkin (71) and Sidney Crosby (87) celebrate a goal by Justin Schultz early in the first period of the Penguins' game against the Nashville Predators in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final on Thursday at PPG Paints Arena.

CRANBERRY TWP. — When the Penguins step into Bridgestone Arena and attempt to beat the Predators and become Stanley Cup champions once again, they’ll be drawing on experience to inform them.

Some of those experiences are fresher than others, like Games 3 and 4 of the series when the Penguins went 0-2 in Nashville. Though the Penguins liked their effort in Game 4 despite the loss, they’ll be looking to improve this time around in Game 6 on Sunday. Part of that is now firmly knowing what the atmosphere will be like.

“ItĢƵ a loud building. The big thing is just to talk a lot, and you’ve got to be loud, you’ve got to talk loud, too,” Penguins defenseman Olli Maatta said. “You’ve got to know at all times where your guyĢƵ at, where everybody is. I think just being on the same page, trusting your partner, trusting your teammates of being in the right spot at the right time.”

The Penguins also will take some lessons from the elimination games they’ve played in this postseason. In the first opportunity the Penguins had a chance to clinch each series, they came up short all three times: Game 4 in Columbus, Game 5 in Washington and Game 6 in Ottawa. The lesson learned is that the Penguins’ focus must be heightened to optimum levels.

“We have to bring our best game. The elimination game is always the most difficult to get. So first and foremost, we have to understand the challenge, and I believe our players do,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said.

“I really believe in these types of games when the emotions are high and the stakes are high, itĢƵ about focus, itĢƵ about attention to detail, itĢƵ about effort, itĢƵ about execution and controlling what you can out there. ThatĢƵ where our whole focus is.”

Beyond the less than ideal experiences are the positive moments that the Penguins can draw upon, such as their Game 6 victory in San Jose last season to win the Cup.

“I think we focused on that game and not everything surrounding it. We just tried to take care of our own game and what we needed to do and kind of let the rest take care of itself,” Sidney Crosby said of the teamĢƵ mentality going into Game 6 last season. “I thought we did a really good job at that, and I think our focus is there and I think that we’re going to give ourselves the best opportunity.”

In the case of less recent experiences, including last seasonĢƵ Game 6 victory, Sullivan said the team doesn’t directly address those formally, such as in team speeches, but rather informally, maybe at dinner or on the plane. Those talks can be especially advantageous to players who haven’t had those experiences.

“Experience is the best teacher for all of us,” Sullivan said. “When you go through the types of experiences the players on our team have been able to go through, you can’t help but learn from them, both the successes and the failures.”

Regardless of the value of those experiences, though, once the game starts, all that matters is executing. The players won’t be thinking of Game 6 last year as they skate across the ice, but rather the Game 6 happening in front of them. But even in that regard, that “stay in the moment” mentality is something the Penguins have learned the value of in the past.

“You know they’re going to be desperate. You expect that, you know that. I think you just try to worry about your game,” Crosby said. “You need to understand what you’re going to see, but you always have to understand that you need to play your own game.”

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