That thought process has helped the Predators to 10 out of a possible 12 points in the early going, a stark contrast from what Rinaldo experienced last season in the desert with the Arizona Coyotes. The transition to Nashville has been a breath of fresh air for the seven-year veteran, who is coming off a season in which he saw a career high in goals and a career low in penalty minutes.
Yes, things are good in Smashville, but even so, you won't catch Rinaldo or his teammates finding any laurels to rest upon with 76 games still ahead of them.
"In Arizona, we had a terrible start, but being here and having the start we're having right now is just a totally different feeling," Rinaldo said. "It's a totally different confidence boost, but there's still so much hockey left to play and we can't get comfortable. We're not going to get comfortable, and we just have to keep going. We're not dwelling on our record, we're not dwelling on the last game, every game is a new game for us."
Sure, the fourth line would like to put a few more pucks in the net in those coming contests, and as long as they keep doing their jobs, they'll keep getting chances.
They may be at the bottom of the depth chart when listed among Nashville's forward corps, but don't let the seeding fool you. The members of Nashville's fourth line are doing much more than just rounding out a roster - they're mucking and grinding in the trenches, contributing to their club's success daily.
Kind of makes you want to consider another jersey, doesn't it?
"It's just about doing the right things," Laviolette said. "It's the battle level, the compete level; it's about being in the right position defensively, the reads that you have to make when you're on the ice, getting the puck outside the blue line or in at the redline - you really have to do everything. They've got to be responsible for everything, and they've done a good job at it."