The Ducks took a 2-0 lead 10:22 into the second when forward Nick Ritchie went high glove on Rinne from the right circle, and they almost made it 3-0 shortly afterward when center Ryan Kesler hit the right post.
Yes, they took four penalties in the third, including two that overlapped and gave the Predators a two-man advantage for 1:31, a stunning lack of discipline even for a penalty-prone team. Goaltender John Gibson had to make big saves, defenseman Sami Vatanen had to make a kick save, and a couple of Nashville shots hit posts.
The Ducks were outshot in the third 11-5 and went without a shot for a stretch of 13:03 that went into overtime. They blew a 2-0 lead and were one shot, one bounce, from losing and trailing 3-1 in the series.
But this is a team that has come back time and time again in these playoffs. They have come back from trailing by more than one goal four times to win. They came back from losing the first two games to defeat the Oilers. Though they didn't trail Thursday, add this to the list of adversity overcome.
The tying goal could have been crushing. Defenseman Hampus Lindholm deflected a shot with his stick. He and others lost sight of it. It fell behind the net and defenseman Josh Manson took a crosscheck to the back as he tried to play it. No call. All of that led to Predators forward Viktor Arvidsson feeding Forsberg in front. The Ducks shook it all off.
"We knew coming into overtime you put that period behind you, go out, play like you did in the first period, on our toes, getting pucks in deep," Perry said. "We kind of changed the momentum there, and we got some chances and we got a break."
They got, in their minds, justice.
"I thought we deserved to win," Cogliano said. "I thought we played a good game. I thought that was probably our best game of the series. It's funny how things work out when you stick to it and you play a solid game."