Less than 20 seconds after Davies struck, Tolvanen got his second of the day when he and Pitlick combined off a 2-on-1. Egor Afanasyev recorded his second of the tournament with a crafty play of his own at the side of the net for a 4-0 Nashville advantage through 20 minutes.
"He's an excellent player, just the guy I like to play with," Tolvanen said of Pitlick. "He sees the ice pretty well, he's a really speedy forward and he can be a two-way guy, too. I like playing with him, and it's easy to play with him. He gives me the puck and tells me where to go, and he's going to put it on my tape."
Carolina settled down in the second, with Eetu Luostarinen and Janne Kuokkanen tallying for the Canes in the middle stanza. Later, the Hurricanes cut the Nashville lead to one goal in the third. But after the Predators excellent penalty kill went to work again, the home team iced it.
Anthony Richard deposited a shot off a scramble at the net mouth for his second of the tournament, before defenseman Josh Healey sent one into an empty Carolina net.
The goal of a showcase like this, first and foremost, is to get better as individuals and as a team. But, let's be honest - who doesn't want to win too?
"Everybody loves to win, and I think this team was really focused since the first day we got here," Tolvanen said. "We had a couple days of practice and lots of us were in Milwaukee last year and kind of knows the structure, so it was easy to play with everybody."
"We had two practices before the tournament started, so how fast we really translated that from practice over to the games was pretty awesome," Tomasino said. "It showed in the final results, so it was good for us. I got the chance to learn new systems, and it helped along the way. Overall, that was probably something that from the beginning was a big influence in this tournament for sure."