
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — It almost happened. Not with a surge, not with a statement — but with a stumble that somehow still had a chance to be enough.
The Nashville Predators came within reach of backing into the Stanley Cup Playoffs, lingering in the race deep into the final week despite a stretch run that did little to inspire confidence.
For a team that once looked comfortably in position, the Predators turned April into a balancing act — hoping their earlier work would hold while their late-season form slipped.
It nearly did.
Nashville stayed alive in the wild-card picture thanks as much to the struggles of others as anything it produced on the ice. Losses mounted. Opportunities were missed. And yet, the math never quite eliminated them until the very end.
By the numbers:
It wasn’t a collapse — but it wasn’t a push, either.
The Predators stopped driving their own fate.
For much of the season, they had done enough. Strong goaltending, timely scoring and a structured defensive approach kept them competitive in a tightly packed Western Conference. They built a cushion.
Then they spent the final weeks watching it shrink.
Still, Nashville never fully fell out. Even as the losses piled up, the standings refused to close the door. Other teams faltered. The gap remained within reach.
And that’s what made it so strange.
A team playing its worst hockey of the season still had a path.
Veteran leadership tried to steady things. The effort was there, but the execution lagged. Chances didn’t convert. Mistakes proved costly. Close games tilted the wrong way more often than not.
It left the Predators in a position few teams want to be in — needing help, and not doing enough to deserve it.
In the end, the help didn’t come.
Or, more accurately, Nashville didn’t do its part to take advantage of it.
The result is an offseason that will bring tough questions. The roster is competitive, but the inconsistency is undeniable. The margin between playoff team and also-ran proved razor thin — and the Predators landed on the wrong side of it.
And yet, the fact they were even in that position says something.
They were close. Closer than their finish suggests.
But close doesn’t count.
The Predators didn’t charge into the playoffs.
They almost backed in.
And almost wasn’t enough.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!