"I'm happy to get it out of the way, first [hat trick], but it would have been just nice to get a win tonight," said Huberdeau, who reached a new career-high with five points tonight. "I think we should've won that one, a tough one to lose. We're back it tomorrow, but a tough one tonight."
Kicking off his very productive night with a hard-fought goal, Huberdeau took advantage of a turnover in the neutral zone before scoring off his backhand to give the Panthers at 1-0 lead just 1:28 into the game. Then, at 9:02, Filip Forsberg pulled the Predators back even with a timely power play goal to make it 1-1.
Just over a minute later, Huberdeau then managed to put the Panthers right back on top when he re-directed in a shot from Markus Nutivaara to make it 2-1 at 10:09. But, at 15:48, Calle Jarnkrok helped Nashville answer once again, burying a one-timer from right on the doorstep to tie the game up at 2-2.
With the Panthers starting the second period on the power play, Aleksander Barkov showed why he's considered one of the league's top players, deftly undressing a defender before sliding a pass through the crease to Aaron Ekblad for an easy tap-in goal to make it 3-2 just 54 seconds into the middle frame.
After Matt Duchene tied the game 3-3 at 6:50, Barkov regained the lead for Florida, taking a pass from Huberdeau and firing off a shot from a sharp angle on the power play to make it 4-3 at 8:01. Soon after, Huberdeau completed his first-career hat trick with a snipe from the slot to up the lead to 5-3 at 15:54.
Since his second goal of the game was initially credited to Nutivaara - and then later Patric Hornqvist - Huberdeau wasn't officially given permission to celebrate his first hat trick until the second intermission.
"I've had a lot of two-goal games, so it was good to get that first hat trick," Huberdeau said.
After pulling their goaltender in favor of the extra attacker with time ticking down in the third period, the Predators managed to cut their deficit down to 5-4 when Roman Josi scored with a blast from beyond the right circle at 17:54. Following a failed challenge by the Panthers on Josi's goal, Duchene then scored on the power play with 54 seconds left in regulation to make it 5-5 and force overtime.
At the 4-minute mark of the extra frame, Forsberg scored to give the Predators a 6-5 win.
Juuse Saros and Pekka Rinne, who came into the game in relief of Saros to start the third period, combined to stop 31 of 36 shots for Nashville, while Sergei Bobrovsky made 35 saves for Florida.
"Obviously, a disappointing point," Panthers head coach Joel Quenneville said. "When you give them two [points], it's big turnaround, a big swing. Definitely disappointed in the way things transpired. I think we can learn from it, but definitely disappointed."
Here are five takeaways from Thursday's overtime loss in Sunrise…