In Game 6 on Monday night, there was a 30-second span where Ryan Johansen won a faceoff, set up Austin Watson for a clean shot in the slot, raced back on the backcheck and stole a feed intended for Patrik Laine at the point. That was all while the Nashville Predators were killing off the first of four Winnipeg Jets' power-play chances.
The Jets failed to convert on three power plays alone in the first period, a momentum shift that helped to frustrate their high-powered offense and allowed Nashville cling to a 1-0 advantage through the opening 20 minutes. Johansen's motivation was evident throughout the first frame and in the do-or-die contest as a whole.
It's a trend that started during the 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs, when Johansen went head to head with top Western Conference centers like Jonathan Toews, Paul Stastny and Ryan Getzlaf and bested them in three separate playoffs series. The postseason uptick helped solidify Johansen's position as an elite centermen alongside the aforementioned trio and led Preds General Manager David Poile to hand out the richest contract in franchise history to the then-24-year-old forward that summer.
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© Darcy Finley