NAshVILLE – Between 70,000 people filling nearby Nissan Stadium to watch Darius Rucker, Keith Urban and Brad Paisley bring the weeklong CMA Fest to a climax, the estimated 50,000 sandwiched onto Lower Broadway for numerous watch parties and the 17,000 mostly Predators fans praying the Stanley Cup doesn't emerge from its big, black trunk hidden in the bowels of Bridgestone Arena, Nashville will be the place to be Sunday.
Amid the traffic jams, gridlock, live music and beer guzzling, a huge hockey game will be played. The Predators hope to rebound from a horribly played Game 5, force a Game 7 and keep the Pittsburgh Penguins from parading with the Cup inside their barn.
History's on Pittsburgh's side. All four of the Penguins' previous Cup championships came on enemy ice.
"The stakes are higher," Predators center Colton Sissons said. "You never know when you'll get another chance to play for the Stanley Cup."
The sea of humanity in downtown Nashville will be at an all-time high. Sunday is the culmination of a busy week that's included scores of bands playing on stages on closed-down city streets and such artists and bands as Rascal Flatts, Eric Church, Lady Antebellum, Florida Georgia Line and Blake Shelton playing at the Titans' stadium. With Vince Gill and Dierks Bentley playing a role, Luke Bryan will open the television broadcast Sunday with a special performance from the rooftop of the renowned Tootsie's.
But as Preds coach Peter Laviolette said Saturday, as dominant as Nashville has been on home ice during this postseason (9-1, 9-0 in games ending in regulation), the Preds can't rely on the fans providing the energy. The Preds have to give them something to cheer about by getting their game intact after playing slow and sloppy in Game 5.
"I know our guys don't sit in there and wonder how we're going to do this," Laviolette said. "I think we're an extremely confident group. Inside the room, it's positive."
It has been a strange series, one in which every game has been won by the home team. Since Game 1, there have been four blowouts, highlighted by Pittsburgh's 6-0 rout in Game 5. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin seem intent on delivering the Penguins the third Cup in their era, something even Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr didn't achieve.