Tuesday's practice was the first since Nashville's 3-1 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers Saturday at Bridgestone Arena. The Flyers started the game looking slow and ineffective, but their opportunism prevailed as they were eventually able to take over the possession battle and capitalize on scoring chances.
"We wanted to play with more purpose and find more pride," Johansen said. "We did that against Philly; obviously we lost, but the numbers were all in a direction that we can feel good about and we can take out of that game moving forward. It sucks losing, but we've just got to keep focusing on the whole package."
Indeed, the scoresheet doesn't tell the whole story. The Predators dictated the pace of Saturday's game the way a team of their caliber should, especially against an injured Flyers squad. But at the end of the day, it's about which team scores more goals than the other - and while the Preds didn't come out on top in that regard, they still felt they had plenty to hang their hats on after Saturday's loss.
"We really pointed to the identity markers that we want," Hynes said. "To win the territory game, to win the shot clock, to win the possession game, to win the scoring chance game, to spend less time in our defensive zone and win the penalty battle. Those are all things that if you do consistently and regularly, you're going to give yourself the best chance to win. Sometimes when you get in a little bit of a slide, you don't just come out of it," Hynes said. "You've got to work your way out of it. And you work your way out of it by your identity and style of play and the things that you're built for."