The Kings got two within 19 seconds to take their first lead of the evening less than six minutes to play into the second. Jarnkrok evened the score when he sniped home his fourth of the season, but Los Angeles countered once more on a goal from Alex Iafallo for a 3-2 advantage after 40 minutes.
Nashville's power play came through once more in the third as Jarnkrok picked a corner to knot things up at 3-3, and then, on a shorthanded rush, the Swede found twine for the third time. The marker gave the Preds the last lead they'd need as the ice surface became littered with lids from a record sellout crowd of 17,627 at Bridgestone Arena.
"He's an important player in here, whether it's offensively or defensively," Ellis said of Jarnkrok. "You put him out on the power play and he shows what he can do. He got us going when we needed it - big goals from him."
Not just one, but two tallies with the man advantage helped to give the Preds some hope that their power-play prowess may be coming back to life. The group has been pleased with the looks and chances they've been getting as of late with the extra skater, and on Saturday, they finally started to fall.
"You're starting to wonder if it's just not going to work for you for a little bit here," Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. "I have to give our guys in the room a lot of credit because we fell behind a few times, but we just stayed persistent and consistent with our game and didn't stop."
With that, the Preds put on a show for the Loyal Legion, and just like their hockey club, they were at their best on Saturday night - and it didn't go unnoticed.
"They were awesome," Laviolette said. "I think they missed us. We sure missed them."