"The three points is one thing but the space he's able to close down and the ice he's able to take away before any plays get to him is something you have to really watch closely," Payne said. "He's one of those defensemen that make the game look really easy because he's a step ahead.
"Guys like that are very difficult to play against. You're always continuing to fight for ice and opportunity to possess the puck.
"The other thing that makes him very difficult to play against and very effective is that he will take on a forecheck himself. He will absorb contact and beat you up ice, with or without the puck."
His speed is deceptive, too.
"He has every intention of going hard past you," Payne said. "He can skate and move; it doesn't look like it all the time, but he's one of those guys who is moving a heck of lot faster than it looks."
It was another textbook performance by the Predators' penalty-killers. The Penguins, who are 0-for-10 in the past two games, appear to be getting frustrated just as the Anaheim Ducks did in the Western Conference Final.
"We've talked about this since the Anaheim series," Payne said. "The [zone] entry against this penalty-killing group is not easy. You're going to have to work extremely hard in order to enter the zone with possession.
"I thought, particularly in Game 2, Pittsburgh had an answer for that and did a really good job of taking what was available to them, drawing Nashville into the middle of the ice and kicking the puck out to possession opportunities. But from there, the next adjustment is Nashville will come after you.
"They will come after you in zone. They'll come after you with three guys to the outside and if you think you're going to make an easy play or you think you're going to make one play and have them back off, it's not so."