"I'm just grateful for the opportunity," Carr said. "One of the coaches [in Milwaukee, Assistant Coach Greg Rallo] said to me after I basically dumped one in my first game in a shootout and he looked at me and said, 'Why don't you just shoot the puck?' I've been having some success with it, and it's been a lot of fun."
Even when the Predators were in the midst of their losing streak and it didn't look promising on the outside, there were elements inside of their game that told them the wins weren't far off. At the same time, they needed more to end up on the right side of the ledger, and now they've done so on consecutive occasions for the first time in a long time.
"We had to find a way to do a little more," Johansen said. "You've got to keep finding ways to handle the little details and the little plays in the game. I think we've done that in the last two games now. We'll look at things again tomorrow and keep finding ways to improve and continue to get better."
Saturday's triumph was satisfying, and Monday's was even better. Now, it's about getting back to playing Predators hockey and executing at the level the group knows they're capable of achieving.
The past two outings will certainly help matters.
"We have to string them together now," Bonino said. "Winning one isn't enough. You look at the standings and it's a very tough division. It's tough, but for them to tie it up and put our back against the wall, I'm just happy we got those two points and just gave them one."