There are, of course, more distractions for any team once it gets to the Stanley Cup Final, but that is where Pittsburgh's experience edge over the Predators should become notable. The Penguins have been through it before, winning the Stanley Cup last season. For the Predators, this is their first trip to the Final.
As for in-game adjustments, Lidster sees the Predators as a far different foe than the Senators were in the Eastern Conference Final, starting with the traffic created in front on the goal by P.K. Subban that was negated on an offside call in the first period.
"I think you're going to see a lot more of that in this series than you did with Ottawa," Lidster said. "Ottawa did a really good job of having numbers in front of the net. This team seems to have a little bit more flow to it. I think [the Penguins] are going to have to adjust.
"There's a lot of point play with Nashville. I know the power-play goal that Nashville scored was a D-to-D pass, but they like to go low-to-high and D-to-D and then have guys in front and their defensemen shooting the puck and getting it through, so I think Pittsburgh is going to have to make an adjustment there and do the best to cut down on those type of activities."
In the end, there is significant room for improvement for the Penguins after Game 1, when they came away with the victory but failed to play the game they wanted to play, getting a win on a combination of luck and some fortunate bounces.
Game 2, set for Wednesday at PPG Paints Arena (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVA Sports) will be different.
"I think they're going to have to expect that Nashville's going to come a lot harder, but I expect Pittsburgh to go a lot harder too," Lidster said. "They'll be a lot better. I think they know they got away with one."