"It didn't need a lot of wind-up," Predators Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. "It didn't have a lot of sell to it. Some people have to get [the puck], bring it, get it back and unload it. I mean that was on the stick and off his stick with the right spot it needed to be in."
Forsberg leads the NHL with 12 wrist-shot goals in the past 30 games, and 14 of his 22 scores this year have been wrist shots.
"I just don't think you have any time really these days to wind up and take heavy, heavy shots," Forsberg said. "Maybe if you're a d-man, you can shoot a few more slapshots. But I can probably count on one hand how many slapshots I've scored on. I just try to shoot it quick and put it at the right spot."
Shot Deception:
One of the reasons it's so hard to beat NHL goalies is because they're so good at anticipating shots. Often times, they know where a shooter is firing the puck even before it leaves his stick.
That's not often the case when it comes to Forsberg, who's shown an impressive ability to fool goalies with his eyes and hands.
If you want to use a football comparison, think of Forsberg as the quarterback who moves a safety to the left side of the field with his eyes, then fires back to the right. If you want to use a tennis comparison, think of Forsberg as a server with the ability to thump the ball into any corner of the box at the last second, eliminating the returner's ability to anticipate.
"It's a very deceptive shot," Preds defenseman Mattias Ekholm said. "He can change it in a heartbeat, whether it's going left or right. There's an unpredictability of where he's going. So goalies can't really lock in on it."