Party in the Plaza people (up) -- Fans took advantage of near-perfect weather on Memorial Day to camp out for the viewing party outside PPG Paints Arena. They started arriving in the morning and kept coming all the day to fill the plaza to capacity and beyond.
Andy Saucier (up)-- The Penguins' video coach is on his way to cult status after alerting Mike Sullivan that Forsberg was offside on the first-period goal by P.K. Subban.
The catfish-thrower (down) -- The game was delayed at 3:20 of the second period when a fan threw a catfish on the ice. Catfish-tossing has become a tradition in Nashville but was not welcome here. The fan was ejected.
Pekka Rinne (down)-- The goalie has been Nashville's rock throughout the playoffs and is a legitimate candidate to win the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. But he was off in Game 1, stopping 7 of 11 shots (.636). It was his lowest save percentage since he allowed three goals on six shots on Oct. 3. 2013 (.500).
Nashville's defense (up) --The Penguins went 37 minutes between shots, from the "own goal" that made it 3-0 in the first period to Jake Guentzel's goal at 16:43 of the third. The Penguins did not have a shot in the second period, the first time a team has gone without a shot during one period of a Stanley Cup Final game since the NHL started tracking shots in the 1957-58 season, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
Pittsburgh's penalty kill (down) -- The Penguins committed three penalties and allowed the Predators to score on two of their three power plays. The Penguins have killed 82.8 percent of penalties in the postseason.
Frederick Gaudreau (up) -- The Nashville rookie scored his first NHL goal at 13:29 of the third period, in front of his parents no less, to tie the game 3-3. "I'd trade that goal for a win 100 percent, that's for sure," he said.