Goalie showdown: Rinne and John Gibson of the Ducks each will have a big say in this series, but they enter the Western Conference Final with far different backstories. Rinne, 34, is the veteran in his ninth season as the Predators No. 1 goaltender and has 58 games of playoff experience. Gibson, 23, is in his fourth NHL season and has 17 games of playoff experience. Rinne began the postseason with back-to-back shutouts and has been consistently strong through the first two rounds; Gibson has been up and down. He made 23 saves in the series-clinching victory against the Oilers but was pulled from one game in each of the first two rounds. His .908 save percentage is the lowest among the four remaining goalies.
Match game: The Ducks will want to get checking center Ryan Kesler against the Predators' top line of Johansen, right wing Viktor Arvidsson and left wing Filip Forsberg. The Predators most likely will want to get their shutdown defense pair of P.K. Subban and Mattias Ekholm against Getzlaf, who has been driving the Ducks offense.
Down time: The Predators are the more rested team, having closed their second-round series Sunday. The Ducks will have less than 48 hours between the end of their series against Edmonton and Game 1. That is not good news for two important Ducks who have been injured. Veteran defenseman Kevin Bieksa (lower body) was close to returning in Game 7 against the Oilers. Forward Patrick Eaves (lower body) has missed the past four games and there is no date for his return. Defensemen Cam Fowler and Sami Vatanen missed time during the first two rounds because of injury.
Defensive depth: Each team, when healthy, has an envious set of top-four defensemen. The Predators have Subban, Ekholm, Ellis and Roman Josi, who have combined for 27 points (nine goals, 18 assists) and a plus-20 rating in 10 playoff games. The Ducks counter with Fowler, Vatanen, Hampus Lindholm and Shea Theodore, who have 16 points (three goals, 13 assists) and a plus-7 rating.
Isn't that special?: Nashville has been shorthanded 24 times in 10 games but has allowed three power-play goals. Anaheim has been shorthanded 42 times in 11 games, second-most in the League, and has allowed 13 goals, six more than any team in the playoffs. On the power play, the Predators are 5-for-25 (20.0 percent); the Ducks are 5-for-36 (13.9 percent), the third-lowest in postseason.