Chicago had their chances, but when a Colton Sissons shot hit the post and bounced in off of Crawford, followed by Josi's second less than two minutes later, all hope was lost for the Hawks. The visitors broke Rinne's shutout with less than six minutes to play, but Viktor Arvidsson sealed it when he walked the puck into an empty net before the final horn.
"It just speaks to the character and the determination everybody put into this series," forward Austin Watson said. "We knew we had to play 60 minutes every single night, if not more. Everybody pulled their rope, everybody did what they needed to do and we were able to walk away with a win."
The Preds don't yet know if they'll face the Wild or the Blues in the Second Round, nor do they know when the series will commence, but there is one certainty that Head Coach Peter Laviolette addressed after the sweep
"When we wake up tomorrow morning, we're hardly into this… there's a lot of work left to do," Laviolette said. ""It's good to win a series… but I promise you this, the next round will be even harder than this one."
Handshakes:
Video: CHI@NSH, Gm4: Preds advance, shake hands with Hawks
In the Stanley Cup Playoffs, anything is possible. Like the top team in the Western Conference seeing their postseason hopes squashed by the last seed in the West.
But it happened on Thursday night in Nashville, as the Predators completed the first sweep in franchise history, outplaying, outscoring and outlasting a Chicago team that has won three Stanley Cups in the last seven years.
Indeed, there is still plenty of work to be done if the Preds hope to keep advancing, but this is a darn good start.
"It's great to be on the winning side after we lost two years ago," Josi said. "They've been such a great organization the past couple years and a great team. It's a lot of fun for us, I thought we played really well. [Rinne] was unbelievable in the whole series, he was definitely one of the difference-makers."
The work of Rinne was arguably the top reason for the result, as the Finn turned aside 30 shots in Game Four, a grand total of 123 shots out of 126 turned aside through four contests.