Nothing fishy about that.
Eakin and Schmidt aren't going to play into the revenge angle at this point. They aren't going to say anything that might be interpreted as remotely negative about their former team, former town or former rink either.
Capital One Arena can be one of the most raucous in the NHL. "Rock the Red" is more than a slogan. It's a great place to see a game.
It also has been a tense place when things have gone against the Capitals, because the team has had such high expectations and fallen short repeatedly. Until this, the Capitals not only hadn't made the Final since 1998, they hadn't made the Eastern Conference Final, despite outstanding regular-season teams.
The Capitals are 4-5 at home in the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs, 9-3 on the road. The Golden Knights are 7-2 at home, 6-2 on the road.
"You know that when you inject a little doubt into this building it can spread pretty quickly into the crowd," a reporter asked.
Schmidt laughed uncomfortably.
"I mean, as the opposing team, I'm trying to inject as much doubt as we can," Schmidt said.
He laughed uncomfortably again.
"I don't know if that's self-inflicted or what," he said. "We're going to try and do that, though. I can't speak on what it does to the rink itself. I don't know."
Another reporter reminded Schmidt that he'd said the Capitals could feel the pressure inside the room and asked if the Golden Knights could take advantage of that.
Schmidt gave the perfect answer. The Capitals defeated their nemesis, the Pittsburgh Penguins, in the second round to advance to the conference final for the first time in the Alex Ovechkin era.
"I think they've surpassed the part of what their pressure was, getting past the team that they hadn't been able to get past in the last few years," Schmidt said. "And being out of the second round, I think that that's it for them."
None of that should matter much to the Golden Knights in Game 3. What should matter most is doing more of what got them to this point. They didn't manage the puck well, didn't attack enough and were too loose in the first two games -- a 6-4 win in Game 1 and a 3-2 loss in Game 2.
"I think we were a little too spread out," Eakin said. "I think we were trying to play their rush game with them instead of getting the puck in and getting a three-man forecheck. If there's one or two guys on our forecheck, it's not effective. They're pretty good at baiting you in, giving you time, then taking it away. So it's just working on our three-man forecheck and playing together."