Byfuglien's contributions cut far deeper than his enthusiastic jig. The defenseman had three points (two goals, one assist), was plus-3, played a game-high 27:12 and delivered three hits, all of the bone-crushing variety.
Byfuglien's performance did not surprise his teammates. Not as much as his dance moves did.
"It's nice to see him get a little excited," said Jets captain Blake Wheeler, who scored the game-winner on a power play at 15:01 of the third period to put Winnipeg up 5-4. "It's tough just to get him to smile.
"Obviously I'm being a little sarcastic here, but get him feeling like himself and what are you going to do?"
Though Wheeler had three points (two goals, one assist), he said Byfuglien was a difference-maker. Again.
"I think [Byfuglien] gets a little bit of a long leash," Wheeler said. "He's so dynamic that he keeps plays alive and can make some really special things happen with the puck.
"He's the great equalizer. There's nobody like him. Having him on our team gives us an advantage no matter who we play. That's the type of player he is, and from Game 1 of the playoffs he has just dominated.
"You can't stop it."
In the first period it was the Jets who were stopping themselves.
They fumbled passes and shot wide. Goalie Connor Hellebuyck was beaten three times on the first 12 shots he faced.
With the normally raucous building blanketed in silence, Jets coach Paul Maurice went into the dressing room and delivered a simple message.
"If we win or lose," he said, "we can't do it playing tentatively. That's not us. That's not the way we play."
Message received. For the next 40 minutes, they didn't.
In the next two periods the Jets outscored the Predators 7-1 and outshot them 35-18.