Over their two-month run through the Stanley Cup Playoffs, they had come to believe that they would be the ones skating around with the Cup when it was all over. Then the Penguins stole their dream ending with a Cup-winning 2-0 victory in Game 6 of the Final on Sunday.
"It's just an empty feeling," Rinne said. "Right after the game, it was really emotional. You don't think about that it might be over before the game and during the game. You believe in it, and then all the sudden when the final buzzer goes off, the season was over]."
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It wasn't a sudden death for the Predators, but it was close to it with former Predators forward Patric Hornqvist breaking a 0-0 tie by banking the puck in off Rinne with 1:35 remaining in the third period. Carl Hagelin scored an empty-net goal with 13.6 seconds to clinch the Penguins' repeat championship and leave the Predators in disbelief.
"It [stinks]," defenseman Ryan Ellis said. "This isn't fun. You come all this way, you play an extra two months for really nothing."
In the coming days, Ellis and the other Predators will come to realize it wasn't all for nothing, but their raw emotions made it difficult to come to that conclusion less than 30 minutes after the game. At that point, the reality that they weren't going to Pittsburgh to play Game 7 on Wednesday was still setting in.
"It's hard to describe," defenseman P.K. Subban said. "When you dream about lifting the Stanley Cup as a young kid, and the dreams happen probably a million times for most of us, being that close, being two games away, 120 minutes away from lifting the Stanley Cup, it [stinks]."